How is this considered on topic, and why are high-rep users encouraging "Here's my code, find my bug " questions?
- The OP posted the entirety of their code; they didnt reduce it to the smallest portion needed to reproduce.
-- (Probably because they never attempted to figure out what they did wrong) - OP has not specified a clear problem with their code. All they have said is "I have some arbitrary goal to do X, here's my attempt, why is my code wrong". What's the problem? What statement or function isn't working, where does your logic break down?
- OP has not done the due diligence of even stepping through a debugger
- OP has not demonstrated what they have done to try to solve the problem. Did they look on SO, did they look on Google? Did they consult a manual of any kind? No probabaly not because they haven't even defined what's wrong with their code other than "it doesnt give me the value I want"
Granted we can see the answer here; min should have been set to 0 initially arguably... but as written this answer helps no one, and teaches the author nothing. No one will benefit from this.. Case in point, look at the answer the user got and basically accepted. "Ooh thanks for the codes" he says.
High Rep user claims : "posting their code constitutes an attempt to solve the problem" I completely dispute this and say that THAT is them posting the problem they created; otherwise everyone who posts the code they've tried is on topic. Is that really a precedent we want to set? You can't attempt to solve a problem you haven't defined. They have to show an attempt at solving the problem they are presenting, not the goal of their software. To do that they have to define a problem; OP hasn't: OP has only defined a context that his problem and solution lie in.
So what's the deal here?