After posting a question on main (the current revision, the original revision) that as far as I can tell is a clear and on-topic question, there followed 5 downvotes, 3 close votes, and some comments such as
With 150k rep you'd think there'll be some code shown
and
You have 11,720 reputation from python answers. Surprised you couldn’t knock some code up, or that you didn’t know you should.
However, it's well supported on meta that code attempts are not required. In response to the commenters, I edited to include code with example failing "attempt", admittedly contrived. After the edit there was some undownvotes and one close vote retracted, but most downvotes and close votes remain (currently 6 downvoters - by the way, is there anything else I can do to improve this question?). Note: "Meta effect" has added upvotes and downvotes in approx equal ratio since then.
Actually this Q was not from a "coder in distress", I posted it because I'd encountered the task in my work and found it interesting that a full-fledged parser was required to solve this problem correctly. There was apparently not any easy quick-fix solution, and that was surprising for a task which seemed like it should be trivial. I had actually already solved the problem at the time of posting the question, but thought such a question would still make a useful contribution on the site anyway.
I might, at a later date, post my parser in an answer. Or I might just delete the question.
Are self-answered Q&A still OK? Are high rep users discouraged from asking questions? If so, why? If not, what's wrong with this question?
Edit: This was recently marked as dupe of When is it justifiable to downvote a question?, a 2014 question which is not even vaguely related. Everybody has their own idea about when it's justifiable to downvote a question, and I'm not asking about that at all. I was hoping to open a discussion about why the commenters are demanding code to be shown here, and why the reputation of the OP has any relevance here. Should we be judging a question on the content alone, or should we take into account things such as the OP username, reputation, avatar, and whether they are new users to the site or they're SO veterans? Is Stack Overflow in 2018 intended primarily as a place to help programmers with their problems, or is it intended to be a curated resource of useful questions and answers?
Coincidentally, Jeff Atwood made a blog post a couple of days after this meta question, which discusses many of the same things I wanted to discuss here. See "What does Stack Overflow want to be when it grows up? " if you're interested to read it.