This question was recently edited to include a specific caveat. Paraphrased:
Is there a solution that doesn't involve spending money?
I don't have any numbers as to how often that caveat is applied to Stack Overflow questions, but I've certainly seen it on multiple occasions. Sometimes it's in the original question, sometimes it's edited into the question, sometimes it's in the form of a comment on an answer, such as (paraphrased):
That doesn't really help me because it costs money.
It seems to me that sometimes (maybe even often?), this can blur the lines between a technical solution (which we do) and a service recommendation (which we don't do). For example (paraphrased from memories of questions I can't find right now):
Asker: I'm trying to publish an ASP.NET website from Visual Studio, but it's asking me about a server. What does that actually mean? The site works on my computer, what do I need to do to make it work for someone else? (I assume I can't be a server, since my computer gets turned off regularly.)
Answerer: Basically, it needs to be uploaded to a server somewhere on the internet that people can access, ideally something which is always (or reasonably almost always) available for requests to use the website. In lieu of your own server, it would have to be another one somewhere else. Azure or Amazon have cloud services which can host websites, for example. As do many others. [proceeds to elaborate on the technical details of publishing an ASP.NET website]
Asker: Is there one that doesn't cost money?
Considering that we as a community also like to maintain a balance between helping the person who originally asked vs. preserving content which is helpful to future visitors (remember "Too Localized"?), what sort of guidelines should we apply in such a situation?
After all, the caveat of "it needs to be free (or very cheap)" doesn't necessarily apply to future visitors. Nor does it in any way address the technical programming question being asked. (In addition to the less-relevant-but-still-extant fact that it's pretty annoying to answer a question thoughtfully only to have the OP complain that you're not being helpful because of some other non-technical requirement that was never mentioned.)