I believe some newcomers could be tricked by the high score of the old questions into thinking that questions like “how do I increment variable in [language]” (okay, that’s exaggeration but you got my point) is valid, and hence they could go and ask a similarly easy to answer question expecting it to be well-received.
Most of them miss the fact that something that is easy-googlable today may not have been so easy-googlable in the past, or just haven’t been asked so many times back in 2009-2010.
Something should be done to specifically address this. Sometimes rather good formatted questions pop in the list, yet so easy-to-find —- I don’t believe that user wasn’t able to find that information over the web, but rather thought that they could also get some upvotes with an easy question.
Of course, I don’t mean that it’s bad to ask easy questions of any kind.
How easy is too easy, though? A question on splitting a string in JavaScript is not interesting, but if a new language comes out (like it happened with swift, for example), then it’s of course absolutely okay to ask basic questions. The point is, once it’s easily searchable, it has been most certainly asked, but some users would still ask it because they thought that a high score is somewhat guaranteed. It’s not really the point that it would be closed as duplicate anyway. My point is: I believe that high score of basic questions from the past tricks the users into thinking they could ask a similar question in a similar area.
oh! it will be ironic if my post is an easy-to-find dupe…