The irony here is that such questions should be warmly welcomed on Stack Overflow, if properly worded and not duplicated. A code example for a generalized task, such as "How to make an AJAX call" or "How to select rows from a database based on a certain condition" would make an extremely useful contribution, given an answer indeed provides a solid state-of-art example.
But not on Stack Overflow.
There are two kinds of people in the world: ones who read answers on Stack Overflow and ones who write questions. In theory, the second is imagined to be used as a source of answers for the first. In practice, however, they need different answers completely: ones who ask need an answer for a too localized question, while ones who read need rather a generalized answer (which makes the question too broad). Both considered off topic on Stack Overflow.
To make it worse
- most of time the OP don't ask "how to do something". If you open the question, it turns out that they actually know how to perform the task in general, and have the code all right. While asking how fix an error in their particular implementation. Which makes any answer deliberately useless for anyone else (ok, with few exceptions of highly common mistakes).
- nobody ever cares for a generalized solution: answers are getting into minute details of the question, absolutely pointless for anyone else.
So, to answer your question:
In a better world, a question asking for a sample code, given it's properly worded and not duplicated, should be the main goal of this site.
In reality, such questions either gets closed or turn into a live debugging orgy, which is directly prohibited by the rules, but highly appreciated by all participants and thus cannot be extinguished.
In the future, if the authorities will succeed with their plans, there will be two Stack Overflow sites:
- The main Documentation site where people are coming from Google for the solutions
- The supplementary forum-like Stack Overflow with "fix my code" questions finally legalized.
This will essentially fix the current awkward status-quo, and let ones who search to have good answers; while letting ones who prefer live chattering to enjoy it unrestrained. Of course if the authorities will have the guts and vision to accomplish that.