Posting an exception message in a question is not an automatic declaration that you (the asker, not you Yassine) want help making the exception go away. Some exception messages are simply there to illustrate a flawed approach to a problem, and the focus of the question may not necessarily be on that flawed approach. As with any question, you need to actually describe the problem you want to solve and how that exception is getting in the way, if at all.
What it is, is an automatic invitation to scrutiny, especially if the message is self-explanatory and even tells you how to solve it. For example if an error message says that there's an unexpected )
and tells you to remove it to fix the problem, and you tell us absolutely nothing about what you don't understand about the exception or how to resolve it, your question is going to get downvoted pretty quickly because the answer will seem blindingly obvious on the surface. Askers that have a habit of not reading error messages (which is a lot of people) tend to fall into this trap.
That's why a problem statement is important. It shows us that you made an attempt to understand the error and if there's something that's less obvious to you, readers might be willing to be a little more patient with you.