I've spent a total of about ten years on the "answering side" of various tech help sites and if there's one thing I've learned is that there's a small group of people who are just not able to solve problems on their own. At all.
Don't misunderstand me, I'm not one of those "zomg all the stooooopid noobz!!1!" curmudgeons, and have quite a bit of understanding for people struggling even with "simple" and "obvious" problems. I still have my first programming book from almost twenty ago with confused notes because I didn't understand how a (C-style) for
loop worked. So there.
But some people aren't just confused. They seem to be completely lacking the ability to solve problems on their own. They will (try to) follow instructions you give them to the best of their ability, and once it fails, they simply come back with "doesn't work". Usually without a descriptive message. They don't try to use the information you gave them to try and fix the problem on their own. In Dutch we call this "not looking beyond the length of your nose".
These people are a somewhat rare breed, and they're probably distinct from the help vampire breed in that they really do seem to try (or at least want to try); although it's also possible that they're the same species after all. Anthropologists smarter than me can decide.
Why are these people the way they are? I don't know. I'm not in the habit of passing judgement on others over the internet (or at all, for that matter). Perhaps this person is eleven years old, perhaps this person just doesn't understand English well enough, or perhaps, let's be honest here, this person just doesn't have any aptitude for this. Perhaps something else.
I once had a prolonged year-long encounter with a member of this species from Afghanistan who had very poor English skills, was in a job he didn't like but was forced to keep due to awkward personal circumstances, with co-workers who were bullying him. It's not easy to creatively fix problems in such circumstances. (The basic idea is that people have a limited "mental bandwidth" and can only worry about so many problems at once; this is also substantiated by research).
At any rate, there are two things you can do:
- Move on.
- Set patience to the MAX and try to help this person.
Your choice. Both are fine. You have no obligation whatsoever to help people here. If your answer doesn't work for the OP then that's fine. Doesn't mean it's wrong.