I can't tell you how many Q/As I've seen of the form:
Q: When I do this, I get this result. Why?
A: Don't do this, do that.
or the related comment:
C: What problem are you trying to solve?
I can understand someone saying "I don't know, but ...", but implicitly blowing off the question seems rude/odd and often misses an opportunity to educate. And yet the behavior seems fairly widely accepted.
Can anyone shed light on this phenomenon? Is this a function of how folks view SO (e.g. as place solely for "solving real problems" vs. more generally a place for "getting questions answered")? Are there more general cultural factors that explain this?
Ironically, this question has been marked as duplicate of What can I do about posters that derail the question with a discussion about best practices? and How can I word a question so I can get a straight forward answer?, so I will attempt to explain why I see this question as being different:
Both of those questions are asking "how to achieve something" and the answers talk to that. I am not asking how to obtain a direct answer. The assumption that this is the objective of my question seems very similar to the assumptions being made by people bypassing questions. I am trying to understand why people respond as they do. It is true that the answers to the other questions touch on responder motivations, and that is certainly relevant, but my question here seems substantially different.
Q: When I do [something convolutedly terrible], I get this [bad] result. Why?
A: Don't do [that terrible thing]. Instead use this [best practice], which was designed to avoid this terrible situation in the first place.