No. Although it gets proposed with some degree of regularity, creating a separate site to act as a "garbage dump" just doesn't work. We've actually even tried it before, and it was a total failure. You can imagine why: who will want to go answer questions there, when it's already been established that the questions there will be low-quality? Without experts, who will maintain the quality? Without any quality, who will want to ask their questions there? Yeah. Garbage and lack of moderation begets more garbage.
The questions should be kept here on Stack Overflow, as long as they are on-topic for our site. If they are not on-topic, either because they're not programming-related, because they don't contain a minimal, reproducible example, because they arise from a typo or other circumstance where the answer is unlikely to ever be helpful to others in the future, or because they are too broad to be answered in our format, then they should be closed. Please vote to close questions meeting any of those criteria, or anything else you find listed in the close reasons.
In this particular case, where you're seeing a rash of questions concerning a specific topic (like implementing a linked list by hand), it generally works best to find and enhance (or create anew) a high-quality canonical question, which you can use as a target to close new questions (even those that would otherwise be on-topic) as a duplicate. This canonical question should be posed rather generally; maybe something like:
I am trying to write a linked list by hand in C++. I know that std::list
exists and that I should use this whenever possible without reinventing the wheel, but I am trying to learn how pointers and linked lists work for educational purposes.
I understand that a linked list implementation should consist of:
[some pseudocode]
How should I flesh this out into a complete implementation?
Then, the answer should be a high-quality answer that explains, in detail, the steps of writing a correct linked list implementation. Feel free to make the answer community wiki if you don't want to take on the burden of writing the whole answer yourself. Or do write the whole answer yourself, and reap the reputation rewards.
These types of canonicals add significant value to our community, not only as a target for closing low-quality duplicates (which, as Heretic Monkey points out, you are in an especially nice position to handle, since you have gold badges in the relevant language tags, thus giving you dupe-hammer privileges), but even just as a general reference point for others. Since it's C++, you should add it to the c++-faq by including that tag. I don't know about you, but I still refer to the operator overloading FAQ on a semi-regular basis, and I find it extremely useful. This could be similar.