I have been on Stack Overflow for a little over a year now, and while I've had many of my questions resolved by kind and well-meaning people, I for some reason have never totally felt welcome here. The "why" of that is something I can't quite put my finger on (and that's honestly too subjective and ephemeral to address here anyway). A more productive question, I thought, might be: how can Stack Overflow be more welcoming?
I am not sure what the exact broader goals of this site (or Stack Exchange in general) are, so I don't feel like I can begin to answer this question very well, which is why I am posing it. But this site (and to a lesser extent Stack Exchange in general) has often felt like a very cold place to me, and judging by some other questions I have found in the meta here, I am not the first to feel this way. This saddens me, because from what I do know, that's not at all what this site strives to be!
Frankly I'm a bit terrified to even be posing this question, but I hope it may lead to some productive conversation.
To clarify, when I say "welcoming," I mean just as Trilarion mentions below -- "courteous and friendly and open." I.e., that a veteran user would assume the best of a new user, make an effort to understand where they're coming from (e.g. recognizing that what is a simple solution to them may be incomprehensible to the asker, despite the asker's best research and efforts, or that English may not be the asker's first language, etc.), and commend them for taking the time to post their question (and taking the risk, apparently, as it seems by some of the helpful links other have provided, such as Why is Stack Overflow - and Stack Exchange in general - so scary? from Josh, I am not the only one who seizes in absolute terror every time they go to post a question).
I recognize that Stack Overflow is meant to be somewhat "academic" as Servy and Cody point out, but speaking both as a former student and as someone currently working in academia, that does not preclude friendliness. Yes, there are professors whose office hours are very formal, to-the-point, and black & white. Then there are those professors who insist you refer to them by their first name, who you learn more from than you ever have, and who teach you more than the answer to a simple question of "Where can I use a semicolon?" or "How can I normalize a database?" (okay that second one maybe isn't entirely simple, but I hope you get my point).
There may be some users, as Cody said, who come here hoping for a fast, easy answer with little-to-no effort on their part. I'm not talking about pandering to those sorts of users. Those expectations need to be quashed (kindly), because I wholeheartedly agree that Dr. Stack Overflow's office hours should not be that kind of place. No, Dr. Overflow's office hours – excuse me – Stack's office hours – should perhaps seem at first blush to have the same relaxed demeanor of a place like Yahoo! Answers (tremendous emphasis on "seem," because ye gods forbid this place ever turn into that), but behind that relaxed, Converse-wearing demeanor is a wealth of knowledge, tremendous respect for you as a learner and fellow human, and subsequently, far more impactful and meaningful authority than some stoic mod with 50k+ rep who closes some newbie's first question as "too broad" because they didn't write it perfectly on their first try.
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Deep breath.
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I hope that helps a bit. Apologies for any unnecessary wordiness, and happy to clarify further if need be.