I came across a question recently (that I now can't find, so maybe it was moderated to hell) that basically displayed a few error messages (in C# perhaps), along with a block of code and the accompanying text was something along the line of "Need this for job, its not working, please give me teh codez to make this work". I may be paraphrasing, but that was the general gist of the question.
OP displayed a tenuous grasp of the language, there wasn't anything hideously wrong about his code that I could see from a cursory inspection and they posted a (reasonably) clear problem description as well as a description of what they wanted to achieve.
What grated against my professional sensibilities was that here was someone working in a similar position as mine, has resorted to SO to try and do his job for him. Now fair play to him, perhaps the question was poorly worded, but the impression I got was that he had no interest in actually figuring out why the problem was occurring, he just wanted a fix.
I did downvote the question, but they had roughly 300 rep so they weren't a 'brand new' user. My question is this: Is downvote really all we can do in this case? This person is literally saying "do my job for free, kthx". Would a more appropriate response be to comment and tell this person, that asking SO to do their job is inappropriate.
I know that similar questions have been posted about student assignment 'gimme teh codez' questions, but I feel that this kind of thing is a little more serious as this is a supposed professional (like we all are supposed to be) who is doing pretty much exactly the same thing except they are being paid to do so.
Personally I have no interest in directly fixing a person's code, rather I try to answer the questions with simple code and an explanation of what they were doing wrong, but in this case its clear that the OP wasn't interested in anything other than getting his code fixed.
Before you pounce on my profile and point out that my own question history has not been stellar, yes, I admit that I was guilty of similar behaviour, but I don't want to delete them because they've been answered.