I know of a few questions that get asked and answered on a daily basis. For example in the C# tag:
- How to read [this JSON] into a model?
- How to read CSV data?
- How to write CSV data?
- Why doesn't my client socket
recv()
what my server socketsend()
s? - How to parse a DateTime in yet another format?
- How to run a background job in ASP.NET?
Unfortunately, the answers those questions receive often barely scratch the surface of the underlying problem, or they just hand out the solution without explaining how to obtain it, and are bound to let OP return after they copy-paste the provided code - or letting later visitors asking their own, slightly modified version of the same question because the question and its answers are too localized.
I would like to solve that problem by creating (or finding and polishing) a "canonical duplicate", a question that asks about the core problem in the most naive way and an answer that increasingly lets the reader understand the problem and pick any solution they like.
In order to do this, I think such a canonical Q&A needs to go through two phases:
- Spend some effort into writing (or finding and polishing) the Q&A, but in order to make them not too broad, clear and to the point, I'd like some other users to take a look at them and maybe suggest improvements.
- Then get other those and users to link to the Q&A as possible duplicates of existing and newer questions.
Now how can I organize all this?
For the first part I could for example create an initial, but (according to the rules) valid "draft" on the main site, and create a Meta post asking for people to look at it?