Stack Overflow works best when you have a particular problem you're trying to solve. A particular problem is typically defined as a problem other programmers would face.
If your code has multiple logic errors, then it's up to you to research them, figure out which are applicable to other programmers, and ask individual questions as a last resort. Since Stack Overflow has been around a long time, you may already find your answer here while doing the research.
So far looking at your questions on Stack Overflow, they're reasonably scoped. You want to keep them reasonably scoped. Asking about 50 lines of code is likely not reasonably scoped; unless it all happens to only do one thing (although even then I'd suggest you narrow it down to the exact few lines that you're having an issue with).
We don't work so well when questions are "show me how this code should be written" though you can get that effect if you ask your question in such a way where it's useful to others. By default, people want to share what they know and will demonstrate how you should write your code, all without asking (and asking only serves to draw attention to that, which garners a less-than-stellar response, generally).
To recap:
- Pull out your issues into small discrete chunks that are useful to others (your existing questions do this; so I'm confident you've got this part down)
- Don't ask someone to tell you how you should write the code -- that's implicit in their answer
- Focus on how you can ask the question in a way where it's useful to others
If the code doesn't have compilation/logic errors, then feel free to take it to codereview.stackexchange.com. They're used to those sorts of questions.