Stack Overflow is about answers:
answers -- truly brilliant, amazing, correct answers -- are as rare as pearls. Thus, questions are merely the sand that produces the pearl.
The most brilliant answers don't necessarily help the asker, but will at least teach OP and later visitors something:
I attempt to answer questions in a way that helps other people who are reading the question, not [the OP].
When I am in the mood for writing an answer, I like it to first explain why the OP is encountering the problem they are, then offer some alternatives, and finally present some trivial code that may or may not solve that problem for some specific instantiations of said problem.
Most questions however do not trigger this response of either me, nor other people willing to write such answers. Most questions boil down to a lack of experience in debugging and rubberducking. Indeed, most questions are actually a combination of multiple problems higher up in the stack (no, reading "What is a NullReferenceException" isn't going to solve the problem that your query returns no records), or a lack in understanding spouting the typical XY problem question. This actually makes most questions "Too Localized", one of the reasons that close reason was removed.
But you can't blame people for not knowing something, and you can't close their questions for that.
What you can blame people for, and what I'm trying to aim for in this question, is posting poor-quality answers to ditto questions.
Do you really help the OP and the programming community in general by dumping fixed code without explanations? No search terms or links for them to learn more? The umpteenth version of an answer that is on the site hundreds of times already? Posting from your go-to cargo cult library of "useful snippets", without actually understanding what that code does?
What I'm trying to ask here of you, the answerers that make this site useful:
- Do not guess. If you don't understand the problem, ask for clarification using comments on the question. Don't post an answer. If the problem description is unclear or incomplete, downvote and closevote accordingly.
- Search, then answer. Really, most basic questions have already been asked and answered perfectly. No need to spread out knowledge over multiple answers. This is an actual problem. Google is already preferring other sites over Stack Overflow, which wouldn't surprise me to be caused by the massive duplication of oh-so-common questions and answers. Search for duplicates, and vote to close accordingly.
- Explain and link. If the code in your answer refers to certain principles, explain them. When you know those principles to be covered in other questions, link to them. The OP and later visitors can then visit those links, or search on the mentioned terms.
- Edit the question. There's always something to improve in a question (I dare you, @Peter Mortensen), especially when it's been asked a while ago. Cut the cruft, make it more broadly applicable. Remove irrelevant code.
- Downvote. Help answerers earn that sweet Peer Pressure badge. When an answer is incorrect, contains outright incorrect statements or consists solely of a code dump that doesn't even attempt to address the OP's problem, downvote. It's not useful content for the OP or later readers.
- Make more canonical Q&As. This way you won't have to repeat yourself or others, but can simply link to canonical pages that perfectly explain what an ORM, DTO and other TLAs mean and can do for you.
So, what's my question, you ask? I don't know. Maybe this: do you agree? And if so, how can we point out to current and future answerers what really matters in an answer they post?