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I will love to offer help more but most of the questions I see in my homepage are always too advanced for me to help. I think I can assist in questions that are in the basic to intermediate level of many popular languages. But I find it difficult to filter that out. Is there a way that can be done?

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    There is no way to filter by skill level; that's pretty subjective. You could search for questions that contain, "Basic", "Beginner", or, "Newbie", although the last should be edited out of questions.
    – fbueckert
    Commented Mar 15, 2019 at 15:15
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    @fbueckert: All of that should be edited out of questions. The level of skill of an asker as part of their problem statement is noise at best.
    – Makoto
    Commented Mar 15, 2019 at 15:16
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    @Makoto Fair enough; I just thought the first two were more likely to be descriptors in the problem statement, ie. "I'm having a problem with this basic query", etc., etc.
    – fbueckert
    Commented Mar 15, 2019 at 15:21
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    Basic questions in my experience are 99.99999% of the time already asked and answered several times before. Please, do not answer just any question you see. Answer only questions that are not duplicate and follow the site rules. (to make your life even harder, sorry)
    – Gimby
    Commented Mar 15, 2019 at 15:22
  • Actually, specialising in finding duplicates would be very helpful, both for the asker (especially if they are found quickly) and for those that can vote to close. You can just leave comments with the candidate duplicates (with proper links, link text being the title, not naked URLs - example: May we please apply the same URL-to-Question-Title feature into the comments?, [May we please apply the same URL-to-Question-Title feature into the comments?](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/280592)). Commented Mar 16, 2019 at 13:43
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    For instance, I can't imagine How do I slice a string by characters in Python? would not be a duplicate after 1,129,811 questions have been posted in the Python tag for more than 10 years (sorry for the double negative). Commented Mar 16, 2019 at 13:59

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