The regular expression questions continue ad nauseam despite apparent consensus as to the inappropriateness of the general form. How else can they be discouraged or preempted?
Perhaps add into the "Questions that may already have your answer" box (which doesn't work well for these kinds of localized questions) a kind of boldly clear (and more concise) message that if you're asking about a regular expression that is not matching the way you expected, maybe you should try a helpful tool like regex101.com or regexbuddy or something else particular to the language variant at hand. For example, regulator covers .NET, regex101 supports PCRE, Python, JavaScript variants, but note PCRE is not Perl nor Java's style so regexbuddy has those and just about everything else plus snippets. Or maybe you haven't read the FAQ parts (honestly the tour is no longer concise enough for people to read) about being on topic, good and complete.
To be clear, I'm not against a question that asks about regular expressions. One could ask what's the best way to avoid a back reference, or use some other feature of the regex, for a given problem. Or: why does this language's regular expression syntax not support back references, are there other options for the language. Perhaps also those like: help me use named captures or branching uncaptured groups because I tried what I thought the manual said, but it broke with a cryptic message that didn't help me. Even "fun" ones like a stack overflow from a regexp.
However there's a good bunch of "I am trying to match lines with X but not those with XY and I want to know if that X line was an XtypeA or an XtypeB", and these are more popular in some language tags than others. It can drown out other useful, more general Q&A.
icanhazregexez
questions are off-topic. Some people don't like them, but they get asked and answered all the time anyway. I'm not even sure they should be off-topic.why does this language's regular expression syntax not support back references
- that's a bad question too. Features are not implemented by default. The answer to all "Why does X not support Y" questions is the same - because it doesn't. Nobody created that feature.