Stack Overflow is not really well-suited to answer incomplete questions. But Access-VBA questions can certainly be complete, and get responses.
I personally have answered 341 questions currently that are tagged access-vba. 225 got accepted, and 60 have no votes and are not accepted. Of those 60, only 20 have no comment and no other accepted answer. So while there certainly are examples of non-engagement, I'd say generally it's pretty low.
You need to account for the fact that Stack Overflow is very much fast-paced. If you answer a couple of days late, the OP has had a couple of days to work on the problem, and pretty likely has already solved it. If no-one engaged on the subject, the OP is likely to not give us feedback on how he solved it.
Also, keep in mind Stack Overflow's main goal is to build a database of knowledge. Providing solutions for specific users is a positive side-effect. If the OP struggles with a highly localized problem that involves multiple database objects (forms/queries/etc.) that indeed is not a good fit for Stack Overflow. But many, many access-vba problems are not like that. The ones you've shared kind-of are.
If you want to help the authors with debugging, I recommend you at least try to respond to more recent questions, but Stack Overflow likely isn't the place for you. Generally, we expect access-vba questions to have a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example, just like any question on SO. You might say that's harder because there are forms, tables and code involved, but that's true too for most database-oriented applications, like .Net WinForms applications.
If you want more fulfillment answering access-vba questions, I recommend the following:
- Focus on recent questions. The older, the more likely you get no response.
- Focus on questions where you're nearly 100% sure about the answer. If you can't be, you can ask for additional information if you want to help
- Make sure the answer has all relevant tags to get feedback from other community members than the OP. For access-vba, that's at least ms-access, vba and access-vba. We have some great experts following vba but not access-vba. Review this meta thread for current tagging guidance on these questions, in the future, likely we will only have ms-access and vba.
Now, let's also go through your examples with a fine tooth comb:
Your first example:
The question was incomplete, since OP didn't report an error or their form structure. You assumed a lot, answered a day late, and got a response. You responded to that response 5 days later. I assume the OP didn't sit on the issue for 5 days, and fixed it in the mean time, nothing really unusual there. Probably shouldn't have answered that one.
Your second example:
OP doesn't want to use an autonumber, and wants to specify incrementally increasing IDs in an append query. Your answer is: use an autonumber. Generally not very helpful, I assume the OP has reasons not to do that in the first place. No need to use complex SQL converting a number to an autonumber, Access can do that through the GUI. Also, 4 days late. No wonder you don't get any response.
Your third example:
The comment by Storax likely properly identifies the issue, the issue is that the OP has set a reference to an old DAO version in an Excel file. Any DAO version before DAO 3.6 will throw an Unrecognized database format error when trying to open an accdb database since it can only open MDB databases.
These old DAO versions are often still present, since the newer ones don't support ODBCDirect. A DAO reference certainly is not generic, that's nonsense, there are multiple versions, with a large difference between ACEDAO (DAO >3.6) and the older JET ones. If you use Access as the host application, you always have the correct one referenced for your version of Access, but OP is running the code from Excel.
If you assumed corruption, you could start by asking if OP could actually open the database, they nearly always can because that's the first thing you try when you get that error, but since we already have an upvoted comment identifying the issue, the only reasonable thing to do is ask the author of that comment to post it as an answer.
Your fourth example:
Not much to say here, this is a bad question and any answer will be a guess.