I've noticed in places that people are keen to encourage and sometimes dismiss questions that lack things like suggested routes to solution, ideas, code, references, data-traces, etc. I.e. evidence of research.
There's some conception of minimum due diligence and people seem quick to evaluate on it, possibly judging by it as a guiding criteria. While certainly in general, researching any given question as well as routes to solution is a good thing and should be encouraged, is it conceivable that some questions are better, or at least adequately presented, without this demonstrative side?
Arguably I believe we can find samples that are inherently precise
How to find all M-length sets of integers that sum to N?
How to check if one string contains another substring?
I've frequenatly seen these type of questions, that can quite understood, but at the same time garner comments and votes faulting demonstrative lack.
So I'm wondering if upsides to a clean propositional approach is unfairly biased, possibly overlooked. Centrally, are we being judged by the demonstrative ability as a mandatory part of a good question? (As a good question isn't inherently worse just because the originator didn't prove it) And related, is there a tendency to conclude that lack of research evidence is the same as lack of research effected? (The originator might have spent too long or thought it was not appropriate.)
As a side-effect are we somewhat arrested in providing interfering content, to the degree of staining succinct and good looking questions with extraneous components? Speaking from a certain transactional ideal even, isn't there a certain aesthetic in having questions without discourse on one side, clearly separated from candidate answers on the other?