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I ran into a problem this morning with templates in AngularJS that I didn't have any idea how to solve. I started putting together a Stack Overflow question for it and in the process of writing the question, I solved it. I find this happens a lot with Stack Overflow. It's the same phenomenon as rubber duck debugging; I guess that makes it Stack Overflow debugging.

I ended up not asking the question. Once I found the solution it wasn't such a good Stack Overflow question any more. It seems to me we might want to encourage that behavior - especially considering how much we don't like bad questions.

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    Certainly an interesting idea, but how in the world would you encourage it and reward it? Apr 11, 2016 at 11:50
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    It has never once been discouraged. And blogged about a long time ago. All that changed is the "we're kind of jerks about it". Happened when Jeff quit, not enough jerks left. Apr 11, 2016 at 11:52
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    @psubsee2003: 5 rep to everyone who doesn't ask a question! Or, every time you don't ask a question, you get 5 rep! Or,... I'll just show myself out, thanks. Apr 11, 2016 at 11:57
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    You get rewarded by not getting downvoted ;-)
    – Marwie
    Apr 11, 2016 at 12:17
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    We don't need positive reinforcement for not doing a bad behavior for which we already have negative reinforcement. @Marwie is joking, but he is completely correct here. In life, we don't give you some kind of reward for not committing crimes, we punish you when you do commit a crime.
    – user229044 Mod
    Apr 11, 2016 at 12:24
  • This is a perfectly fine idea, and hardly deserves this amount of downvoting. The problem is how to implement it in a way that isn't trivial to game.
    – Pekka
    Apr 11, 2016 at 14:53

2 Answers 2

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If the question is interesting enough, you always have the option of self-answering it.

If - on the other hand - the question just isn't a good SO question, I guess finding a solution to your problem should be enough of a reward.

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I started putting together [a] question [...] and in the process of writing the question, I solved it.

It might sound alien, but this is the standard practice for a lot of developers. Running to Stack Overflow to ask a question and get an answer should be about the last thing you think about.

If I'd used the Ask A Question page for every rubber ducking session I've done in the past few years and this feature you're suggesting would be in place, I'd be a reputation millionaire.

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