The very first line of the "Welcome to Stack Overflow" page states:
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers.
Asking a question of "how do I do x?" without even attempting a solution yourself shows a marked lack of enthusiasm. There are exceptions to every rule, but in general if you don't even know how to begin to answer your own question, it's probably not ready for Stack Overflow. Not stupid or unworthy--just not ready.
Setting a standard for questions isn't elitist; it's necessary to keep things in any way manageable. If the guidelines implied that certain people weren't good enough to post on SO, that would be elitist. A question like the one @me-how links to (paraphrase: "I have a table in Excel. How do I read into an array in VBA?") isn't terrible for, like, the world, but it's not great for SO. Whether it's explicitly stated or not, I think it's fair to say that there's a consensus in the community that Stack Overflow is not a code-writing service. In my opinion, the person who answered that question did the poster a huge favor, but did a disservice to the community at large by pushing the site one small step closer to being, among other things, a tutorial for VBA programming. There are already sites for that.
A common refrain in these situations seems to be, "if the answer could help other people, then it should be allowed (if not celebrated!) and you're being snobby for disagreeing". To which I would counter that posting the secret formula to Coke or a treasure map to El Dorado* would be pretty helpful to a lot of people, too, but that doesn't make it appropriate for Stack Overflow.
As to the specific question that started this whole discussion, in my opinion it's borderline--the poster has gotten far enough to identify a possible solution, but doesn't know how to implement it. It boils down to "please write me a regex". The regex tag description says:
Even if you are not well versed in regexes, it's better to show us
what you've tried than simply asking the community to solve your
problem.
so maybe a comment pointing the OP to an online regex tester would have been appropriate.
*because then you would be rich and could just pay someone to solve your coding problems.
(?<!\\)&
regex solves my particular issue.