This is kind of related to the Fastest Gun in the West problem, except it's for questions instead of answers.
Many of the most common programming questions have already been asked and answered:
Why is it faster to process a sorted array than an unsorted array?
How to check whether a string contains a substring in JavaScript?
That's a good thing, since users can easily find solutions to their problems.
But with so many questions that've been asked and answered, tons of new questions are being closed as duplicates. Since the most basic questions have already been asked, only very specific and unique questions won't get closed as duplicates. Unfortunately, if they're very specific and unique, they're in danger of being closed as too localized.
Extremely specific and unique questions:
identify records in one dataset that are in between times in another data set
Insert values in gridview manually using textboxes,loops? ASP.NET C#
The more specific and unique a question is, the less likely other users are going to know the exact answer to that particular question.
But those really basic questions, almost anyone can ask. It's just that they asked them first, and they get all the credit (upvotes).
Will a time come when 99% of all programming problems are solved, and there's barely any room for questions that aren't too localized? I can't think of anything to ask, and I desperately need rep!
The real issue people are missing here in all the answers and comments is: Whenever a question/answer is the "first one" posted regarding a specific common problem, that question gets loaded with votes throughout the years, even the most simple ones So the advantage is really the first questions and answers. The more time goes by, the less common problems are reported that most users search for. I have seen many users with massive reputation that barely know how to spell in english, when I check their profile I see they have a couple of questions that got many upvotes throughout the years. – user5890979 Sep 6 '17 at 23:35