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https://stackoverflow.com/questions/33552349/checks-whether-the-digits-of-a-number-form-increasing-sequence-c

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?

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    Note that it's not really feasible to post on meta every time you see a bad post get answered and not closed. This kind of thing happens thousands of times every single day. It's unfortunate, but posting on meta every time you see it just isn't a practical solution to the problem; it just doesn't scale. This (I suspect/hope) is the reason for the downvotes on this meta question. You seem to clearly understand that (and why) this is a bad question, so there's not really much for us to tell you other than, "yep, this sucks".
    – Servy
    Nov 5, 2015 at 19:26
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    In this case, I especially enjoyed 'Using microsoft Visual studio-2015' - OP has an IDE debugger with panes for vars, locals/stack etc, a stepping cursor, mouse-tip expression evaluation etc. and so...... no, post immediate on SO:( Nov 5, 2015 at 19:36
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    To note: downvoting an answer because you dislike the question is not doing anyone any benefit. Vote based on content. If you took issues with the content of the answer fine, but using a vote as a punitive "WHY ARE YOU ANSWERING" is flat out ridiculous and harms the community.
    – Travis J
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:17
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    One of the answerers' point of view. At least he's not fickle, and stands by his principles.
    – Jongware
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:20
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    @UpAndAdam - From your comment (i.imgur.com/QsoKZwJ.png) and the direction of this post, that is an interpretation other people will take. The note was not just directed at you, this is conversation that as a community we have had dozens of times over the years and the conclusion is that downvoting answers punitively does not help the problem of poorly asked questions. Action the content, if the question is poor, then downvote and close. Same with the answer. But please avoid calling out users just for answering like that as it doesn't really benefit anyone.
    – Travis J
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:24
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    When the content of an answer is encouraging people to answer awful off topic questions, then they deserve a downvote.
    – user1228
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:24
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    When you attack answers, you get less answers. This is true of both poor quality and high quality questions. Driving away people who would be answering questions is not a solution to limiting awful off topic questions.
    – Travis J
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:26
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    @Jongware That just makes it worse; he's doing this rampantly. The problem is that his principle is ill constructed. By his definition any question of the form "here's my codez I can haz answer" is acceptable because they want through the trouble of posting the code which constitutes their 'attempt'. The 'problem' is not the goal of their code. He doesn't get this. The problem is "why your code isn't doing what you think it should be".
    – UpAndAdam
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:27
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    I agree, it is just making things worse to answer these questions. Which is why they should be closed faster so that no answers can be posted and the asking ban can be triggered quicker. If anyone has ideas on how to approach the cause (job shop questions) and not the symptoms (teh codez answers) please post an answer here: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/308837/1026459
    – Travis J
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:31
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    @travisj i would completely disagree with you. its the complete LACK of accountability for any of the so called high rep users who are supposed to do things properly that is the cause of this problem... We constantly have discussions about being nicer to new users, notice how we NEVER say be nicer to high rep people? The whole system here is to give people 'permission to do stuff' and increase their rep based on them following the rules... through learned behavior. So is that meaningless too??
    – UpAndAdam
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:32
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    @UpAndAdam - Feel free to actually post your concerns in an answer because you aren't disagreeing with me, you are disagreeing with community consensus. You realize the high level of duplication going on in this discussion right? There is a certain level of irony that this entire post is more of a rant with no nod to historical discussion and yet its topic is about questions who do not show enough research effort or explanation.
    – Travis J
    Nov 5, 2015 at 20:35
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    @TravisJ The answers are bad answers. They're harmful to the site, the author of the question, and future visitors. The reason that they're harmful is of course indirectly related to the fact that the question is horrible. When you ask an unanswerable question then the answers will by definition, not be good answers. If you downvote the answer you're still downvoting it because the answer is bad, but the answer is often bad out of necessity of the question being bad. People going around upvoting the crap answers to the crap questions is why we keep seeing more crap questions.
    – Servy
    Nov 5, 2015 at 21:06
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    @Servy - Upvoting is definitely counter productive in that scenario. If you see an answer whose content is incorrect or problematic, then naturally it is can be downvoted for being "bad". That said, people with pitchforks out in force downvoting every answer to every question they issue a close vote to is far more problematic. There is no evidence to support that taking the approach you suggest is a solution. There is only evidence to the contrary that downvoting answers solely based on the question causes less answers to be posted in the future - even to good questions.
    – Travis J
    Nov 5, 2015 at 21:10
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    @Servy - I didn't say that, I said that every answer to off topic questions is not immediately bad, and should be voted on based on content. You can look at my profile, I do downvote. I am not saying not to downvote, and especially am not advocating pity upvoting. I am merely saying not to downvote for the sole purpose of making a statement not to answer questions that are "bad".
    – Travis J
    Nov 5, 2015 at 21:17

1 Answer 1

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How is this considered on topic

It's not. It's just depressingly hard to find 5 people that actually care to vote to close.

why are high-rep users encouraging "Here's my code, find my bug " questions?

Because it's a quick and easy way to earn lots of rep, despite the fact that, as you described, it's not useful for anyone involved (the answerer, future readers, and the OP are all harmed by these answers).

If people didn't upvote these answers to offtopic questions (and usually quite a lot; thanks to the bikeshed effect) then there wouldn't be so many people so inclined to post answers to them. Downvotes to these answers also tend to just get overcompensated by pity upvotes by people that think any answer that's technically correct shouldn't be downvoted, regardless of how useful or harmful it is.

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    Finally we agree on something!!! LOL
    – UpAndAdam
    Nov 5, 2015 at 19:17
  • I downvoted both the who.. whoever answered. Nov 5, 2015 at 19:40
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    @MartinJames I would if I didn't know it's just result in pity upvotes.
    – Servy
    Nov 5, 2015 at 19:47

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