A similar question was asked around the same basic idea, but the proposed implementation was seemingly disliked: Would it be a terrible idea to split SO up into a tiered platform?. This is also a similar question, which was frustratingly closed as a duplicate of the former: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/252834/why-dont-we-have-an-se-site-for-programming-help-vampires.
My question is a bit different. Should we create another Stack Exchange site for beginning programmers?
Forking is not my preference, but it's seeming that the the "leadership" in our community has come to a consensus on a few items. Among the topics of discussion here in meta lately, it seems the item of the day is "We're getting too many bad questions." My interpretation, which may not be accurate, is that it boils down to:
- This community is mostly for us the experts.
- Top priority: give us interesting questions to answer.
- People asking trivial questions are obviously lazy, and we don't want them around here.
- People answering trivial questions are enabling the lazy, and goldarnit, though reputation points are meaningless, I'm really mad that they're getting reputation points.
This is not the community I'd wish upon beginners. They come to our site, not knowing community norms, not knowing enough to craft a good Internet search to find their answers, and sometimes not being familiar with the available tools on Stack Overflow. They ask their boring, trivial question, and a gang of summer-of-love-hating experts jumps on them, pelting them with downvotes and rapid closes.
Basically, a "%#*&$ you, get out of our community."
I want a community where I can go for help, and I can help others in need. It's for that feeling of philia-style love, that you're not alone in the universe, and we're there to help each other along. I'd rather not assume the worst of everyone asking a boring question.
I answer a lot of questions for this reason. And so I'm probably now labeled as a rep whore. Awesome. (Notice how in this diagram everyone but the caretakers gets a negative label. I don't have a problem with caretakers, but I'd label some of them as the snobs instead).
Yes, "help vampires" are a problem. But I see complaint after complaint from people that are clearly not vampires but are beginners with programming. I don't mind helping beginners. Everybody has needed help when they're getting started, whether they admit it or not.
Should we have a site where people that are helpful and beginners that are in need are not vilified?
the Internet will not benefit from the blind leading the blind
.