I'm good at researching, and I'm also good at debugging, so I rarely find the need to ask for help here. But I still want to contribute questions, which is an enormous part of SO. I have gotten the majority of my rep from answering questions, but I would like to get some variety. Of course the badges and rep will be a bonus.
I read the blog post here, which brings up the metaphor of the TV show Jeopardy. I feel that it fits in a different way: I have the answers (or can easily find them), but I need to find the questions.
I've already looked through virtually everything on the subject of self-answers, but there's little that explains that about finding the perfect question.
I find a lot about what content we all want to go away (spam, gibberish, help-vamps, great wall of code), but not very much about what content we want to see more of.
I can think of several types of questions that I have considered doing a QA pair with:
Canonicals. In particular, I see this
cannot get property ____ of null
error floating around for JS. I don't know much JS, so I figure it would be a learning experience.Documentations. I don't really like how everything is written, so it might be a good idea to write my own version. Of course I would focus on a particular topic for each post. (I am currently sitting on one of these, but I haven't decided to submit it.)
Speed tests. Computer science with both computers and science, gathering data and making conclusions. I would pick two valid methods of doing something and compare them. There are a plenty of questions with equally unconvincing answers. (I am able to test Perl, Python, Ruby, Bash and, of course AppleScript programs in Automator, and it shows how long the execution time took.)
I know that this is subjective (but this is Meta), but I hope it will help people like me develop a good QA pair. (It shouldn't be too broad if you stick to one of the three options I outlined.) And it will benefit the community by giving it more of the content it wants to see.
Which subjects seem good for a self-answer? Can anyone provide some facts from SEDE maybe?
"But I want to ask questions, because I'd like to get some of the badges."