I tried to comment but it says I need at least 50 reputation to be able to do so, so I am offering an answer just so that I may offer up a perspective of what most of you would consider (and I would as well) a novice. Check around the site for my questions, you will see that I had some bumps along the way in my first posts. But from the perspective of someone who has come here looking for help, I will say that you all are indispensable. Makoto, I understand the frustration of dealing with novice users.
If I may offer up my own perspective, though, some of us are here out of desperation. When I first came here, I had stepped into a new environment and been asked to create automation based on my technical skills being strong (I have worked in QA) and I had a very basic understanding of VBA based on my work in creating macros in Excel (most based on recording, and then adjusting). I was then asked to start incorporating that into Outlook and Word which I was able to start doing. But Outlook code is different than that in Excel and I was lost.
So I spent months (literally, months) searching for code help. I even reached out to some excel book authors. I was able to find some code here and there and started teaching myself as best I could. However, there was some stuff I just could NOT figure out. So I started posting on sites like this one. Some of you tried to help me, but as you first noted, I got frustrated because some of what was said to me I just did not understand. I knew enough to post my code, to post the error I was getting, etc. But some answers like using a library, or enabling scripting, etc, I had no clue. So I researched the terms, etc. Eventually found answers. Tried things, posted back and forth, etc. Some things that were probably annoying for someone like you....I had no idea that you could step through code using F8. Did not know that debug.print would show in the Immediate Window. Did not know what 'Dim' meant, and so on. I still would not know if it were not for the help and knowledge of people like you on this site.
I honestly think that there are probably only a handful (relatively speaking) of people like you who ACTUALLY have this coding knowledge in the world, and you have no idea the impact your help can have for someone struggling. You do not need to offer up your time or knowledge. I personally do all I can to give credit to you guys. I wish there were more options to do so on this site other than just marking something as an answer. Wish I could buy you all a beer, but I cannot. All I can really do is say thank you and that I have learned so much from this site and its contributors in the past 9 months. To the point I am now moving down a whole new career path. I still will sit here for days at a time trying to figure something out on my own before I post here. Then, in minutes, one of you will post up something like one small line of code or a syntax correction and then boom, everything works.
You have no idea the feeling when suddenly your code works when you have been hammering away at it for days, weeks, months(well, maybe you do, I just figure your code all just works from the get-go!). In that time, though, it is so much frustration and failure. This site is a like a beacon of hope to someone like me who is truly trying to learn and just gets 'stuck'. Things like loops, certain conditionals, needing to know how to incorporate a function, use a dictionary, etc. Still really tough for me. But I am learning, thanks to you guys.
I wanted to comment on this (again, I hope that is okay) because I am one of those guys that came here not knowing what I was doing at all, and I hate to think of someone else like me getting turned away completely just because they may be asking a question wrong, or do not know what you guys want to see. SO does offer up instruction in posting questions, but even so we may think we are doing it right, but still screw it up. Just know that for some of us, we do it in earnest and really are working as best we can to figure it out on our own. I read posts on this site for weeks before posting, because it was obvious you all had the expertise. I think that is why others do it too. In my first ever post, it was downvoted, etc. I was very frustrated because in my head, I thought I had done a good job in forming the question. I am thankful that I was not completely turned away. As I said, this has changed my career path. That is the type off effect you can have on users you help. I needed help in learning just how to debug as well.
Downvote, delete, etc, this post as you see fit (I hope you don't!). I just wanted to post from the perspective of someone who has been one of those frustrating people mentioned in this post and to once again say thanks.
[mcve]
in brackets in a comment.