I'm getting more and more annoyed with the elitism shown on Stack Overflow.
This site is becoming a terrible place to ask questions, and each question that I ask seems to get downvotes, close requests, and what-more. I am seriously considering removing all my contributions to the site and moving on to a new community. When did this happen?
Some examples:
- An age old question, receiving many upvotes and actual comments amazingly didn't fit the site anymore. Suddenly it got closed (and later deleted with auto moderation), and received downvotes?!
The 4 stars should be an indication that this is not something that should be removed! - When I post a new topic that fits the format (silly questions only please) it gets an immediate downvote for being "stupid" to more experienced people?
- Another question gets downvotes and close requests within seconds (!) of posting. This is utterly silly; why should I try to compile something that I explicitly said does not work. You only program after you prove something works, not before!
- A question that asks how certain internals work also gets closed (and it seems no one here actually knows anything) - if it is about hardware it should be moved, not closed. As far as I can see, the question is valid and interesting to anyone interested in how computers work; a subject that touches programming. (As assembler follows directly from opcodes generated by decoders).
- A question asking why a language does what it does also got closed. That felt really stupid. The answers were luckily completed already. But really, understanding why a language does things (instead of just noticing "hey it does ABC, just use that and don't think") is the very most important step to fully understanding things. It felt as if I was told to "just stay stupid and believe us it is best".
But maybe the worst example is how "definite book lists" are no longer allowed. This is simply exemplifying the attitude change around here. To quote Ben Franklin:
"Give a man bread and feed him for a day, teach a man how to fish and feed him for a lifetime".
This also counts for programming: "explain a problem and let a programming fix a bug, give him a book and let him fix all future bugs". As a Q&A site, the focus ought to be on education, helping newcomers with programming languages, helping them understand everything so they become masters themselves and can help future newcomers.
However right now it seems this site is getting more and more of a "showoff" feeling - who can answer the best question. And if you can't do that you fail. I'm actually getting ashamed by this, and how people seem to think it is normal to show this kind of elitism. Maybe my questions don't always have the best wording, but I'm not an Englishman, and I'm an Aerospace Engineer, not a language PhD.
So instead of closing, editing questions should be the first "trigger". And only when editing can't be done a question should be closed. As a last resort - help each other out and accept that not everyone has the same fluency.
I understand that with this volume some strict rules have to be made. But rules always have exceptions. Take the definite booklist questions - they are the single most valuable resource I've found on the internet. The actual recommendations are much better then just searching Amazon. When one searches Amazon one finds all kinds of reviews.
For these kind of important questions, exceptions should be made; they should be allowed and wiki'd the moment they rise!