Below you can see a great example of this:
There are no examples of what the user tried, no specifications, nothing. Just a "tutorial" question. How is this possible?
Below you can see a great example of this:
There are no examples of what the user tried, no specifications, nothing. Just a "tutorial" question. How is this possible?
That question has that many votes because it's very, very old. The site was a year and half old, still learning how to walk. It didn't have that many questions, and quality standards and rules had not set in. Since then it received almost 6 million visitors, and a tiny fraction of those decided to vote on it.
If you asked the same question today, you'd be very likely downvoted, yes. And you couldn't fault the downvoters. Today, finding the answer to that question is much, much easier than back then, so it would not be wrong to say that the question was very poorly researched (which is one of the reasons we have to downvote a question).
But not only that: I think the argument could be made for the question to receive close-votes as "too-broad" as well.
Because the question, in its simplicity, it's not adequately scoped. There are many, many ways to accomplish that simple task. Different JS engines. Many libraries. Multiple frameworks. The question lacks detail, like if the asker cares about case-sensitivity, repeat patterns, cares about newlines, etc, etc, etc.
If the question were not locked, it would have received dozens of answers by now, most of them repetitive and of poor quality. There are other examples of this.
You could say: well, if a question is "generic" and doesn't provide any details or constraints, any answer is valid, right? It is in fact a very answerable question!
But even it doesn't need an entire book nor a complete tutorial as an answer; there are too many valid answers for that question, and no way to determine which one, if any, is correct.
And in real life, very simple, not properly scoped questions have a very nasty tendency to mutate as they receive answers and comments, and a scope begins to emerge. That many, many times, is completely different from the scope that the first answerers/commenters tried to divine.
There is another very famous question that could be used as example of a simple "generic" question. It was posted by one of the founders of the site to "prove" that the site was open to beginners as well as experts, and to show that this simple, how-to questions were a good fit for the site:
How do I move the turtle in LOGO?
There was a lot of back and forth regarding that question, but it was eventually closed and locked. I think who best explained why this question was no good, was the other founder:
Simple is fine. No effort and research is not
But that statement was made many years ago, and we made ample progress in defining why this type of question is no good.
We know now it is not about "effort" and "research" on themselves, what we care about are the resultant artifacts: details, context and scoping that allow potential answers to provide useful, verifiable answers.
And yet, the turtle notwithstanding, how-to questions are fine. And they do not necessarily need code. But they do need to be adequately scoped.
(Many times they most certainly benefit from code though, it makes it easier and clearer for answerers, so they can understand what you are trying to accomplish, and properly situate themselves to be able to post rich, meaningful, useful answers; this is a programmer's website after all: most of our issues do deal around code, even if the question is not about "debug this for me please".)
There are no examples of what the user tried
This is fine.
"How to" questions do not need to exhibit a failed attempt, and never have. I personally think that failed attempts typically make such questions worse, by warping them into weird hybrid questions that are sort of asking how to do the thing in the title and sort of asking us to debug the failed attempt.
no specifications
The problem seems to be specified well enough for 7432 upvoters to understand what's being asked and for people to be able to answer it. What further specification do you think it's missing?
Just a "tutorial" question.
What do you mean by a "tutorial" question? I'd understand that to be a question that is asking for a tutorial. But this clearly is not such a question. It's a narrow question about how to do one specific thing, potentially answerable with a one-liner.
contains
method which didn't exist.
Today, if you would ask that question, it would be downvoted because you haven't shown any attempt to do minimal research. A quick google already leads you to an answer, here on SO. Right, the one you are talking about.
It's fine to ask about "How to do XY in language Z?", as long as you are the first one to do so.