First off, it needs to be pointed out that United States law essentially forbids Stack Overflow from allowing users under the age of 13 to create accounts. (US law matters because that's where the company is based.) The only way that kids under 13 can use the site is if their parent creates and supervises their account. So, even if it would be useful, it is not really possible for us to create a "Stack Overflow Kids" for the youngest of programmers.
Second, I don't actually think that this would be beneficial. It suffers from the same fatal flaw as related proposals to create a "Stack Overflow for Beginners" (or "Novice Programmers", or whatever you want to call them). That flaw is, the website would become a virtual wasteland. Expert users would steer clear of it because it contains a smaller percentage of questions that they deem "interesting", and without the expert users there to audit and maintain the quality of the Q&A, intermediate users would begin to become suspect of its quality and therefore avoid it. After a relatively short time, it would consist only of kids (or novices, or whatever little group you were targeting), which essentially means that we would have a scenario where the blind are leading the blind. I don't say this to insult anyone, but rather to point out that the benefit ("killer feature", if you will) of Stack Overflow is our user base. We have some of the smartest, most capable programmers in the world here to offer advice themselves and audit the advice provided by others. If those people aren't there on "Stack Overflow Kids" (and I argue they wouldn't be), what would differentiate that site from any of the hundreds of other discussion forums that already exist out there on the web?
Asking Questions:
- First asking a question would "post" which would then temporarily add the simple question on to the site.
- An Answer would be prompted to the asker and the asker would answer yes or no to whether or not the answer was satisfactory.
- If it wasn't then the asker would be prompted to give a short explanation as to why. This explanation would then be appended to the question.
This is pretty much what we have now, except that questions are not added "temporarily" (and it's unclear to me how they are actually "temporary" in your proposed system, or what advantages that would have). Indicating whether an answer is "satisfactory" is already done via the acceptance checkmark, and explaining what part is unclear/insufficient is already done via the comment feature, which is always available to the asker on his/her own question.
The only thing that is really new there is to automatically append the explanation to the question. I suppose that might be a desirable feature, but if it's a winning idea, then it should be added to "Big Boy Stack Overflow", too.
- Both asking and explaining would have a character limit.
This one is different…and I think a terrible idea. Partially because I've never been able to keep anything under a character limit, which would essentially prevent me from ever participating on such a site. But also because arbitrary limits just don't make sense.
Answering Questions:
- Questions are available to stack overflow users who, if they wish, can answer the question or send them an answer that has been previously given.
Again, we have this now. All questions that get posted to Stack Overflow are available to all Stack Overflow users, and if they wish, they can either answer them directly or they can flag them as a duplicate of a question that has already been answered.
or
- The server will then try to match similar questions and then if the meaning of the question matches another question that has a an answer then that answer would then be sent.
And again, this is the slightly new part of your proposal—a suggestion of an automatic duplicate-matching algorithm. If this were to be implemented, I don't see why we should limit it to "Stack Overflow Kids". It should be available on the main site, too. A rudimentary form of it already is, with the automatically-generated list of "related" questions, visible while you're composing a question. Anecdotally, people think that list is pretty good (usually better than what they're able to find with a search), so perhaps we should expand that further.
The questions that are answered would then be stored on the askers computer. However, unique questions would be stored in a database.
What is the advantage of this? Why shouldn't useful content be publicly available to everyone? (It should.) Here is where I begin to wonder if perhaps you've misunderstood the purpose of Stack Overflow—or if perhaps you are proposing a site with a different and contradictory mission. Stack Overflow is not a help desk or tutorial site. We aren't here to teach people how to program. Our system just doesn't work for that, and we shouldn't try and make it work for that on a new "Stack Overflow Kids" site.