TLDR;
The question promotion algorithm favours questions that are hastily asked first and then actively followed up, but neglects questions that are meticulously written and as a result received little activity.
I'm sure I'm not the only one to have frequently run into this issue on Stack Overflow. This is my most recent question that ran into this issue, given here so you would have some context. I feel confident in saying that this is a well-researched, well-written, but difficult question.
Sometimes I spend hours researching a problem I encountered and only then come to Stack Overflow to post a question. At this stage, my research has been pretty extensive, and I have tried almost every potential solution I would reasonably be expected to try. So I put down all the things I have tried in great detail, and post the question in one-fell-swoop. This is in-line with all the suggestions of "How do I ask a good question?" - sufficient research, specific title, problem introduced clearly, reproducible, tagged, and proof-read.
However this becomes exactly the poison of the question - it is so detailed and deeply-researched that people cannot even nitpick something to comment on. There are no obvious suggestions - all have been tried already; there are no issues with the questions itself - all guidelines have been followed; there is no additional information to be requested - all that's necessary has been included.
So with no comments, no edits, and no activity in general, the question just quickly dies. At the time of this post, the question I linked above has been posted for 10 days, and have received a grand total of 25 views, with no answers, no edits, no comments, and 1 upvote. I put a bounty on it, which seems to have done very little.
According to "What should I do if no one answers my question?",
Edit your question to provide status and progress updates. Document your own continued efforts to answer your question. This will naturally bump your question to the homepage and get more people interested in it.
But how can I? I have already spent hours on the problem, tried everything I can think of, and included all my progress (or lack thereof) so far in the original question post. Without even a suggestion from others, how can I be reasonably expected to make further progress?
So if I'm understanding this guideline correctly, isn't this the most effective way of posting a question?
- Deliberately ask a not-so-good question by leaving out details and things I've already tried
- Let people suggest the obvious, then little-by-little let out more information, even though I knew it wouldn't work from the very beginning because I have already tried it
So basically, with the current promotion algorithm, wasting time in this "pretending to be an idiot" game seems to be a necessary price I have to pay to just keep the question somewhat active. Closely following the question-asking guideline actually screws me, whereas the optimal strategy is actually to not follow the guidelines. Hopefully, you can see too how this is a problem.