I've been relearning Python after an 18 year lapse. As I have a question, I web search it. If there's a SO answer, I go for that one first, because I am familiar with the SO format and the often-nuanced community answers help my consideration of the problem. Anyway, I arrived at this question yesterday. It poses a concretely-answerable, programming-related inquiry:
What is the simplest way to get a list of the values in a dict in Python?
The answer helped me. It would have taken me a few minutes to wade through the Python docs, while the SO answer took only seconds. I wanted to "give credit" to the authors for their help. But I couldn't. The question is locked.
This seems like a perfect Stack Overflow question. Per the Help Center and Jon Skeet, these attributes make a good question:
- Write a title that summarizes the specific problem. Check.
- Introduce the problem before you post any code. Check.
- Include all relevant tags. Check.
- Proof-read before posting! Check.
- Post the question and respond to feedback. Check.
The question has a correct, accepted answer attached, so I don't see it falling under the "Lacks Minimal Understanding" clause or being the result of systemic failure.
So, to me, this looks like a legitimate question that should not be historically locked. Am I mistaken?