A relatively new user has stumbled upon my area of interest, asking many low quality (vague) questions that show a lack of prior research. This user has 44 asked questions in 37 days, and answered none.
I've interacted with them on a number of questions, and they have a pattern of asking very broad questions, then asking new related questions when they get stumped based on feedback from other users.
Also, they've somehow managed to gain 87 reputation, apparently from having the occasional question that ends up having useful answers. It's a bit of a paradox. I think if they have a good question, they deserve due credit, but there's hardly any down votes on their poorer questions. Probably because there are just so many that hardly anyone is reading them.
I don't want to be too harsh with them, because there does seem to be a language barrier, and they do seem to be learning a little bit, but they're leaving a lot of useless questions in their wake. Is this considered ok? How many questions is too many? Should I flag questions that they are clearly moved on from and don't need an answer to anymore? If so, which flag would be appropriate?
[faq]
and[ask]
(they only work in comments). Something like: Please help us help you. Be succinct and complete, show what you have done, what exact output or errors you are getting and what the expected output is. Without that, it is a guessing game and we won't be able to help you. Take a minute to read the faq and How to Ask, it'll safe you and us countless of hours, a minute well spent.;
is missing somewhere in the code. Such question could be kept I don't know how much, but let say 3 months. And other questions like "how to convert an integer to string" wich can be (re)useful to many people. The difference between these two sort of question could be made by upvoting. If a question has more than zero (up)vote, the question is kept for the next trhee months. By that way, we could even erase questions with obsoletes answer. Just my thought...;
can be closed as off topic because they're typos. Used to be called "too localized". Basically the answeryou're missing a ; on line 10
is only ever going to be useful to the one person that asked it.