Can we change the large-font motto on the Tour to something less obviously chaotic and destructive than "Ask questions,...?
Some incredibly high percentage of first questions show little or no effort on the part of the questioner. I don't mean on difficult issues, either. I mean Python programmers who haven't used type
, dir
, or help
to examine the variables and methods that they're asking about, or haven't even tried bits of code inside their loops in isolation, in an interpreter. (One user asked for information about what pop()
does, and the question was 50x longer than just typing my_array.pop()
into an interpreter. Madness!)
As daffy and unwelcome as those questions are, SO seems designed to generate and welcome them in their droves with the tour motto: Ask questions, get answers, no distractions. Every new user that takes the time to take the tour--And kudos to them for respecting SO enough to do so!--gets immediately led astray in a way that makes SO worse, and contradicts one of the first links that the dutiful post to them, How do I ask a good question?. We tell them to ask, and then punish them for asking! We shove them into the grinder and blame them for being hamburger.
I realize that, if successful, the total number of, let's be honest, total shit questions would go down, and that that traffic drives a lot of reputation gain. (I shudder to think how much of my own reputation came from answering inane questions because it's quicker and safer than searching and flagging a dupe.) I don't know how badly that decrease in activity would harm SO as an organization. But, right now, the endless flux of syntax, debug-my-typo, and I'd-like-to-use-AI-to-solve-X questions is turning the job of trying to contribute into the Nothing Grinder of Despair.