I have seen a many popular questions on Stack Exchange which are asking for explanations for very simple things like what does the yield keyword do and does Python have a ternary conditional operator.
In fact, if you look at a list of the highest voted Python questions, you may see a trend that very 'simple' questions (ones that could be found in a book) tend to be voted more highly because it is the simple questions that people often search for most frequently.
Many of those questions appear to not "show their work", which is said to be not allowed in the tour section of this website.
I think they are great questions and add value to this site, but I am confused as to when you need to show your work. Many of these questions could be answered if they would have looked in a book; but it is useful that they were asked because we can Google for the answer instead.
As a low rep user, I feel that I must make a considerable effort to prove that I've 'done my work' to avoid being chastized. However, sometimes trying to prove that I have done work results in:
- The question loses clarity and brevity
- Attention is given to the work done rather than the actual question
- Less people are willing to read your question
- Answerers skimming through the question and fail to understand the question
I believe the brevity of the questions in the list attribute to the popularity.
Therefore, I am confused with how to frame a good question; although I believe that using brevity is very desirable. When is it OK to ask simple questions without showing my work? Is reputation a factor?
the amount of views and votes they've received indicate that they are valuable
That is a false premise. That a lot of people have seen something doesn't mean that that thing is more valuable than something that has less views. Simply see my previous comment. That SO is getting views for it doesn't mean that information literally doesn't exist anywhere else in the entire internet, merely that SO has more Google Juice on those specific topics (or just even enough to get a small percent of the traffic).