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I came across this question earlier this evening. At first glance it was a clear "I can has teh codes?", but the OP self-answered.

I am aware of existing resources like:

To my mind, self-answered questions don't get a pass from the site quality guidelines; this would not be an acceptable question had the OP not answered it, and the fact that they did doesn't make it so. However, the votes on comments suggest a split of feeling each way. So is there a consensus: are questions like this on-topic? If not, should that be clearer in the Help Center?

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  • unlikely to help future readers?
    – gnat
    Mar 31, 2015 at 19:20
  • @gnat well I think so, but the OP's comment and three votes on it disagree!
    – jonrsharpe
    Mar 31, 2015 at 19:21
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    I've improved the quality of the question, hope that helps! Again, would really like to see the many solutions you came up with. Would be useful for all the people who took the time to upvote the question, the answers, and provide helpful comments that improved the final solution.
    – Gyan Veda
    Mar 31, 2015 at 19:46
  • @user2932774 I have posted the fastest I came up with
    – jonrsharpe
    Mar 31, 2015 at 19:56
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    If you google "first month of quarter" even without mentioning Python, the question's already on the first page. This could well make the question useful to those with the same question regarding other programming languages (if they are willing to unravel a little Python syntax) and makes this a valuable question.
    – Dexygen
    Apr 1, 2015 at 18:30
  • It's already on the first page just like would automatically be any trivial localized enough question. Asking such a question on SO doesn't make sense. Apr 3, 2015 at 12:08

2 Answers 2

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There is a difference between "this question is not very good" and "this question is off-topic".

By saying the question is off-topic, you are saying the question should be closed. And I don't see anything to suggest it is off-topic enough to close it. It doesn't seem to be too broad, and the question is perfectly clear. The existing close votes are not correct in my opinion.

All that being said, you are absolutely correct that self-answered questions do not exempt anyone from the question quality guidelines, so you should feel free to moderate it as you would any other low quality post - that is downvote.

In short, a poor quality (or lazy) question is not a close reason, but it can be a downvote reason.

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A self-answered question should be clearly stated, and not be so specific as to be unlikely to help others. But I don't think we should insist that self-answered questions show research in the question because the result of research is shown in the answer. The fact that the OP answered the question shows that not only an effort was made, but also that the OP's efforts succeeded.

This similar prior question, with currently has 28 upvotes 1 downvote and 5957 views, shows that there is an interest in finding which quarter a date is in. That two earlier answers were buggy shows the answer is not totally trivial.

The more we know the harder it is to sympathize with people who know less. More and more things seem trivial. But we need to fight this urge to call things trivial just because we know the answer. If we don't fight this urge, then in theory any question that is asked could be closed simply because five other people already know the answer and think you should be able to figure it out too. Since there is no objective way to define what is trivial, you are free to decide for yourself what you think deserves that classification. I merely wish to urge that we have some patience with others especially when they show they are trying by answering their own question.

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    +1 For "But we need to fight this urge to call things trivial just because we know the answer."
    – TripeHound
    Apr 2, 2015 at 12:49
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    Yes, we do need to fight it - it has become a worryingly common trend on this site. Apr 2, 2015 at 16:56
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    I don't ask a lot of questions because I dig very deep before asking. The most popular question I've ever asked ended up being self-answered. It has over 11K views and a fair number of upvotes on both the question and the answer. Obviously people find this helpful. I don't think a self-answered question should be closed just because it is self-answered nor because it requires specific code. If a problem is solved, and if that problem might be experienced by others, then let the question stand!
    – Joel Brown
    Apr 3, 2015 at 10:40

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