So the other day I answered a question with a seemingly straight-forward solution. I expected the answer to be accepted and at most, to receive a comment asking for a clarification of something. However, what happened is that the OP's comment made me think they don't even know where the input data came from. So I decided to look around a bit...
What I discovered next, is that the OP had asked several related questions {see links below} that were "just the right amount" dissimilar to not be flagged as duplicate, and also didn't trigger the "wrath" of the community by presenting results (that actually were) obtained using code from previous answers as "attempts" by the OP that were close but "not quite" what they need.
See the following posts (partial list): post1, post2, post3, post4 <- this is actually a bit funny because I explained to the same OP the exact same thing he asked in his latest comment.
A critical coder will notice immediately that some of the solutions seem to be conflicting in the grand scheme of things (e.g. converting numbers to strings only to be converted back into numbers later), and will "stop everything" to ask the OP to explain the bigger picture, since what happens here is that a multitude of "best" solutions for very specific problems may not be the best solution overall.
I think that there's a certain catch 22 here, where on the one hand, not mentioning the big picture may result in less or worse solutions (since the problem is somewhat ambiguous), but on the other hand, describing the big picture (in an incorrect fashion) may get the question closed for being too broad.
I obviously have nothing against this specific poster, and I'm assuming that I'm not the first to encounter "overcompartmentalization" and its faults.
And to my question: How can we overcome overcompartmentalization?