I recently came across a question with a bounty Calculate average exchange rate for time period where the person asking the question set the rules for the reward description in such a way that he basically wanted someone to deliver for him 2 specific Postgre functions and a Django model in order to earn the bounty.
Reward is for the person who will write two PostgreSQL functions and one Django class:
months_between(date1, date2) - from link above without ABS average_weight(value, start_date, end_date, range_start_date, range_end_date) - implementing formula I've provided. AverageWeight - Django custom class allowing to use in annotation in QuerySet: Own aggregate functions Both PL/SQL functions are need to have ability to use in SELECT statements.
The rules on this reward strike me as being closer to a set of requirements on a project than a set of requirements for a question to be considered as clearly answered. I attempted to answer what I thought was the question underlying the issue, and the responses I got from the person asking the question felt a lot like having a boss dictate what needed to get done on a project, more than a collaboration to answer a question.
My question is, should bounties be used to ask other people to basically "do my homework" by giving them a specific list of functions and requirements for inputs and outputs and constraints?Or is this the wrong way to use a bounty?