The question that is prompting my request is What is the difference between List.of and Arrays.asList?. This is the type of question that asks the most trivial question about a new feature, the type that are answered with just a little searching. Back in 2009 those question were considered acceptable, but not today (How much research effort is expected of Stack Overflow users?).
While some might not agree with such a strict view, even to the most forgiving person must ask themselves what kind of research the asker did. Currently the question is equivalent to
I saw this new thing but instead of trying to read about it I wanted to be fed the answer.
The acceptable minimum is (should be?)
I saw this new thing, read about it there and this is what I understand, but I don't understand this point(s).
For those outside the Java realm, we have the JavaDocs which are the first and foremost information source. It is the official documentation by the language maintainers. They are integrated into our IDEs and pop with a mouse hover. It is unacceptable under any standard (educational, enterprise or otherwise) to not know of their existence or ignore them. If questions as the one under discussion are allowed, I might as well ask about every method and class in the language "what is ___ used for?".
My biggest surprise is the amount of upvotes the question received for being such a poor one. There are abundant similar questions which show no research and are downvoted drastically. Is it because this is a new language API that we're allowed to ask such questions? This is happening during a time where the community has voted that question quality is the first topic to improve (Help set Q&A (TeamDAG) product development priorities).
True, the question has been closed, but then reopened. The comments show weak reasoning for this:
In my opinion, closing this question cuts too sharply against the intent or spirit of this forum. I vote to re-open since I feel others may have this same question, there are differences in implementation, and closing is too reflexively punitive.
and
Javadocs do not mention the difference between implementation details of these two methods (like space consumption or performance). I think people would like to know these details too.
Others having the same questions is not a reopen reason. The point about difference in implementation is a technical one. The docs do mention differences in implementation, but not all of them. However, if these unmentioned differences are the reason for the question, then the question should have mentioned what's already written and ask specifically about these, as I've pointed out above. Ironically, the accepted and upvoted answer does not mention this point at all, and just reiterates the docs.
Have voted to reopen it seconding the thought that a lot of things are detailed but the examples with their implementations are meant to be bringing value to the explanations which are(shouldn't be) not supposedly documented anytime.
Again, show what source you read, what you didn't understand about it and what code you wrote to test the behavior yourself. Then ask for examples about the parts you didn't understand. Am I allowed to ask for code examples for every method and class in the language?
I would like to clarify that conceptually I'm not against being able to ask any question one wants, I'm against the severe inconsistency that is displayed here. If I'm told here that this question is acceptable and deserving of its 30+ upvotes, I will gladly ask about 30 new features in Java 9 to which I can answer by copying the docs. I will also write a very long answer befitting of such a broad question.
Can I have a clarification about the question quality policy on SO?