This is relating to the "StackOverflow is unwelcoming" debate going on.
Someone on this question within meta.stackexchange said:
[I]n the end it boils down to the quality of the post, not the poster. And I'm not saying "discrimination never happens on the basis of the poster being in a marginalized group", but downvotes are rarely cast because of the poster being who they are. In my opinion, the hostility some people experience isn't because they're a part of a marginalized group, but more because of post quality.
If it is not down to the poster being new, female, or of any other marginalised group, I feel that some things need to be sorted out and this is one of them.
One thing which newbies and "relative newbies" seem to have a problem with is how to provide a "good quality" question. What constitutes a "good quality" or "high quality" question?
Let's put this into context
What would a newbie consider to be a "post of good quality"? A question which outlines with enough detail what they are after? This is how I started. Plus I was new to the kind of coding I was posting about when I was made to feel my question was invalid.
As an example, one of my very early questions posted on Stack Overflow (and I was new to Stack Exchange too) was Using PHP, how do I link a page and load it with a variable when clicked? which received two downvotes with to my mind no valid reason given in comments. The first comment was a sarcastic:
"Yes, this is certainly possible."
and then there was a comment following that stating:
This question is off-topic because it is asking about possibilities and is not a concrete coding question. If you want to know if something is possible you should research it and attempt to implement it
This comment was upvoted six times and I was confused. I asked a coding question and it was a valid question which I did try to research without any real way of indicating that I did.
Thankfully I got an answer but not without feeling that I am not welcome as a newbie, especially seeing others being lambasted for falling foul of standards which seem unclear to those new here, and elitism felt was shown in my comment afterwards thanking the answerer.
Isn't it interesting that we get responses like this when the person responding has a reputation figure which is astronomical to the point that they feel that they can run those learning the fine art of coding down. How do you know I haven't tried researching? I knew that the coding I had in my head was not going to work so I put the question out there after I couldn't find out elsewhere. Thankfully we have people like @mareckmareck who is willing to help.
Even though I am now a more seasoned Stack Exchange member, and although I have posted three questions on Stack Overflow this year (the first one being the first for three years) I am still a bit apprehensive of asking more questions in Stack Overflow. I have to really struggle first and it isn't a nice feeling.
Since posting about this in the same meta.stackexchange question linked above, I got a further two downvotes and the question cannot be deleted because it was answered. In case any more downvotes come my way, at the time of writing this I now have a score of -4!!!! A bit heavy handed on the downvotes is it not?
It seems that questions relating to complicated scripts of code are upvoted a lot and when a basic question is asked by someone, it is downvoted and considered invalid, even though someone else who is new to coding may find that question helpful.
So what is the answer? Can basic coding questions be considered "good enough" for Stack Overflow? If so,