Today I came across this question: Calculate the sum of each column of an HTML table in Typescript. The poster has 47 rep (so, not a new user anymore), asks a question, and provides a screenshot of his code (see first revision).
To me it looks like here is some shit, do it for me, I don't even dare to help you helping me. I pointed this out in a (a little bit sarcastic) comment, and got another comment that I was rude. So, the reply I was about to give to that comment was
@PatricioVargas well, is that rude? Maybe toxic a little, but the guy asks for a free help, and the only thing he needs to do is to provide MCVE.
Then I decided to first check in the Ask question form (I'm don't ask questions that often) whether all those
etc. are visible there.
To my surprise, there is no direct link about how to ask questions there.
I've seen a lot of posts that the Stack Overflow community is toxic and unfriendly especially to the new users; it does not accept newcomers, etc. That's why we introduced all those "New contributor" badges, those reminders to avoid beating newbies.
However there is no way those newbies can learn. The "be nice" policy is good only when it is bidirectional.
Half of the questions are literally trash and again and again somebody writes as a first comment 'Please add your code', 'How to reproduce this', 'What is your intention' etc.
But, wait a minute, it's not a paid on-call service. It should be first of all fun.
So, maybe the problem is not in the "New contributor" badges? Maybe the community would be more friendly if the questions were better?
There are lots of solutions, e.g.
- add links to "How to Ask"
- add reminders to the questions
- add the ability to push standard comments like 'please follow https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask', 'please create an MCVE' etc. Of course, one can always make some sort of JavaScript bookmark to write such comments, but why not doing it as a part of the platform?
But, the primary is to care of quality of the questions in the first place. As long as a good question is almost an answer, it is quite important for a Q/A platform to have high quality questions.
Am I wrong?