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I know there will be some people who will rush to say "Well, obviously your question is unclear" and my answer to them would not be very polite. That is because I have posted 4-5 questions of which only one got upvoted. This has become increasingly annoying, as I need answers fast and people just seem to project their hate and complexes on me despite the fact that I have provided the question, my faulty answer, the outcome, the expected outcome and any other comments to further explain the situation.

Someone please enlighten me on why this community is even more toxic than Reddit or Twitter, because it really does not promote productivity or assist anyone.

P.S. I am a beginner, so my questions are also a matter of two minutes to answer for advanced programmers...

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    This community is not designed to promote productivity or assist individual users. As explained in the tour, our goal is to build a knowledge base. Low-quality questions do not contribute usefully to that goal, so such questions are downvoted, closed, and/or deleted. If you are resolutely unwilling to accept feedback regarding the clarity or completeness of your questions, , then I am not sure how we can help you. Nov 17, 2021 at 10:31
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    I notice that you didn't take the tour, but doing so is useful because it tells you what SO actually is: "With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed, high-quality answers to every question about programming." A library of knowledge, not a free, personal help desk. That advanced programmers could answer them in 2 min suggests that they are likely duplicates. It has nothing to do with "hate" or "complexities", it's just content curation, when the contributions don't meet SO's standards. Nov 17, 2021 at 10:31
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    Questions where the title starts with: "Write a Python program that..." are not actually questions; they're assignments, which don't fit into a Q&A model. Nov 17, 2021 at 10:31
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    Content rating isn't toxic. If you see it as toxic, that isn't the community's problem; the problem is the quality of the content you have provided. Some would suggest that the "toxic" side of that is the person who posted the low quality content (which isn't the users that voted).
    – Thom A
    Nov 17, 2021 at 10:33
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    “Someone please enlighten me on why this community is even more toxic than reddit or twitter, because it really does not promote productivity or assist anyone.” — This is not productive; so what is the purpose of this post? Looking at your original post, the first revision essentially contained “Write a program that does X. I’ve written this code, but it doesn’t work.”. Read What Do You Mean “It Doesn’t Work”?. Nov 17, 2021 at 10:35
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    Then, you’ve added a bunch of noise complaining about downvotes, stating “I have provided all the requirements.”. Really? So, you must have read How to Ask, which tells you to provide a minimal reproducible example which links to How to debug small programs. So, what did these steps reveal and why did you choose to not include any of your research in the question? Nov 17, 2021 at 10:36
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    Also SHOUTING (all caps) at users is often only going to attract downvotes. Adding that you explicitly call out downvoting, even more so. Shouting at us is just rude; you're asking for free help on a problem from others in the free time. They are under no obligation to help you, and being rude to them is not going to make them feel obligated, or even interested in putting in any effort.
    – Thom A
    Nov 17, 2021 at 10:41
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    With respect, you clearly don't; otherwise you would not have posted this question.
    – Thom A
    Nov 17, 2021 at 10:48
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    "well this is not a community for advanced users either" The majority of users you get answers from will be "advanced" users. Without those users, this community would fall to ruin where the quality of the answers is poor; and there will be no advanced users to warn others about the (fatal) flaws of said answers too.
    – Thom A
    Nov 17, 2021 at 10:49
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    My job, as a moderator, is to remove things that violate site policies, like rants and abusive language. I don't go around clarifying people's questions. I am not a Python programmer, so I couldn't tell you if your question makes sense or not. In fact, although you consider yourself a beginner, you likely know much more Python than I do. Of course, this is not merely a site for advanced programmers. All levels of questions are welcome here. Being a "simple" or "basic" question doesn't make it low-quality. However, being a requirement-dump does tend to have that effect. Nov 17, 2021 at 10:53
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    We believe asking questions on our site is a privilege, not a right. If your contributions don't meet SO's quality standards, SO is the wrong place for them. It's not a tutoring service. Nov 17, 2021 at 10:54
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    For starters, @GeorgeTsakoumakis, you don't ask about the problem you're having. You give us your assignment, and just tell us your attempt does work. "ask the question about the code you wrote to solve your homework problem and be specific with the inputs, desired outputs, and error messages." We don't need your assignment task, just details about the specific problem you're having. Also "Ask about specific problems with your existing implementation"; you don't tell us what the problems with your attempts are other than they don't work.
    – Thom A
    Nov 17, 2021 at 11:23
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    I do not understand what I am supposed to do in case I need help with homework I must be getting old, I still remember when homework was something you did without the need of crowdsourcing. Do you not have a teacher or other people in the same class to talk to about this? Why is your first thought to outsource your thinking? Grumble Kids these days grumble
    – Clive
    Nov 17, 2021 at 12:58
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    very un-American What a strange thing to say with regard to this situation. I don't get the impression anyone was claiming that it's particularly "American", nor related to other countries
    – Clive
    Nov 17, 2021 at 14:56
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    To reiterate what others have said before, this isn't a "help site" per se, and many new users of the site can become frustrated with it due to not understanding this key concept. It is a question and answer site where both questions and answer quality are curated by site users with the goal of creating a collection of high-quality questions and their answers. Help is often obtained, but as a useful by-product, not as a primary goal. Comments are there to give you feedback and help you create better questions, questions that we hope will be judged good enough to keep and be answered. Nov 17, 2021 at 17:24

2 Answers 2

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If you need an answer fast then posting on Stack Overflow is not the right thing to do. We are not a help desk. We are trying to "build a library of detailed, high-quality answers to every question about programming".

Nobody is downvoting you! Votes are a content rating system. We rate the usefulness of each post for future readers. If your posts are getting consistently downvoted then maybe you should spend more time before you post to analyse how useful your new topic will be for the community.

Voting is not toxic. On the contrary, it is the nice thing to do for future readers. We let them know what is not useful and they don't need to waste time reading it.

I am a beginner, so my questions are also a matter of 2 minutes to answer for advanced programmers...

Then I highly doubt you should post these questions on Stack Overflow. Simple questions like this have been asked multiple times and when you post it again, it will just be closed as a duplicate. You need to come up with a brand new topic. Something for which you can't find an answer on Stack Overflow yet.

Make sure you read the Expected Behaviour page.

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  • This is the opposite of helpful. I might be a beginner, which is exactly why I expect some form of help from advanced users. I don't think anyone would feel much obliged from such a trivial question, but unfortunately, I cannot answer it on my own, and I require assistance.
    – user17203516
    Nov 17, 2021 at 11:08
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    @GeorgeTsakoumakis As long as this topic hasn't been covered yet on Stack Overflow then feel free to ask a new question.
    – Dharman Mod
    Nov 17, 2021 at 11:16
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    @GeorgeTsakoumakis " I might be a beginner, which is exactly why I expect some form of help from advanced users." That mindset is far from adequate here. As others have explained here, this site is not a helpdesk, and contributors work as volunteers. As a consequence, no one is really entitled to receiving help when asking a question.
    – E_net4
    Nov 17, 2021 at 11:31
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Well for this question and this question

  1. What values are you using to test it?
  2. What output are you getting, what output do you expect?
  3. Are there any values that do work?

Those "debugging details" are missing. I note that in one of your other questions you do include such information

Also how is it you're unable to progress. Are you stepping through the code in a debugger? Why is that unrevealing as to how to progress?

I also see you've accepted answers on three of your questions so you are getting useful answers. Downvoting isn't "hate" it's a measure of quality. We're also not here to "answer questions fast", we're all volunteers here.

Take the time to look at other questions on this site that are upvoted and see how they differ in structure from your questions.

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  • Thank you for your answer, it is exactly what I was hoping to hear, and by that I mean a useful answer which will help me post clearer questions in the future. However, many people in the comments are mad at me for "posting homework" because I am a beginner/intermediate user. Unfortunately, I do not meet their expectations, but there is nothing that I can do about them. Could you point me in the right directions regarding that?
    – user17203516
    Nov 17, 2021 at 10:59
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    @GeorgeTsakoumakis: Maybe this is helpful for you: How to debug small programs
    – honk
    Nov 17, 2021 at 11:03
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    Some people don't like homework questions because they feel you're not learning what you should be if you get them answered for you. You can help avoid this by breaking down the question into the specific piece you're stuck on rather than presenting the whole thing. Nov 17, 2021 at 11:03
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    It's probably worth pointing out that code/input/output provided as images might as well not exist. Transcribing them to code formatted text is important to help us answer questions. Nov 17, 2021 at 11:11
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    @RobertLongson also, there are folks like me who dislike h/w because these make site less worthy for us, "I want Stack Overflow to keep helping people like me - those who get their answers here after dumping their question into google search box... I don't want my search results polluted with useless solutions to homework dumps..."
    – gnat
    Nov 18, 2021 at 11:33