I respectfully 'somewhat disagree.' Yes, a lot of noise is a bad thing, but some of it is a warning. Of course it has no place in the subject line, but it should not be forcefully removed from the question itself.
Perhaps a good way to solve the problem of excess noise would be to introduce a blue (or some other color) squiggly underline that marks LQ-indicator phrases. And not just phrases, but also missing capitals (i->I, jquery->jQuery, etc.) But again, these should be suggestions, not filters. Because most people use i for their loops and sometimes you're using all lower case because it's a url.
My main disagreement is that things like "I searched on the web but [statement here]" should be obvious to everyone, but aren't to some people on both sides of the noob/mod divide. When someone asks a noob question, this statement is like marking that checkbox "Yes, I've looked!" stating that they have tried to find it and couldn't, and maybe the answerer can direct them in how to find it. I've seen countless questions that I myself could not find the answers to on any other site, be it w3schools.com, api.jquery.com or the 19+ JavaScript Shortcuts page, and I could only find any reference here on this site, but the question was closed for the answer being supposedly well-documented, and I had to look at another similar question that managed to get answered before it was closed. Yes, some noobs still say that even when it's not true. But some mods assume it's never true, and close down a question that people have legitimately tried to find the answer to. Instead of banning the phrase, encourage people to say where they've looked.
The four times I've tried to write a question here, I searched and looked at at least 3 different sites and 3 SO questions that have a similar title and no relation whatsoever, and I start to write a long question and have found the answer by looking at the most obscure related-questions near the bottom of the related-questions sidebar. But until I get about 3/4 of the way through a post, nothing relevant shows up. And some people, for the sake of not having questions as long as my posts, simply write "I've looked everywhere I can think of" instead of writing each place they've looked.
But some noise is viewed as a positive thing. It is conversational and makes more sense to our brains because it is someone asking for help, not a teacher asking a question on a test. I agree that there's a fine line between too much and not enough. But writing "Thanks in Advance!" on a question is like writing "Sincerely," on a letter. Adding "I'm new to javascript" to "How do you turn a string into an array?" is the difference between the following answers:
- Just use
json.parse(string)
string.split(',')
divides a string at each comma it comes across and puts each piece into an array, in order. At the end, there will be no commas in any of the substrings stored in the array. The argument determines the delimiter, or what this method uses to split up the string.