One of the best ways to improve your writing (for Stack Overflow questions, or anything else) is to read what others have written. Find questions that generated lots of good responses and study them to see how they have used tags, how the question is structured, etc. Do the same for questions that were received poorly. After a while, start reading through newly-asked questions and try to predict how well they'll be received. If your predictions are mostly correct, then it's a sign that you understand how good questions are written.
To bring more eyes to your question, you have to understand how people find your question in the first place. This includes (no particular order):
- Listed on the home page
- Listed in the feed for a tag that someone is following
- Listed on the "questions with bounties" page
- Featured in the "Hot Network Questions" sidebar
- Listed in the "Related" sidebar
- Found by searching on the site
- Found via external search engine (Google, etc)
Some of these are out of your direct control (like #4), but some of them can be used to make your question more visible. #2 is why using the appropriate tags is helpful. Adding a bounty is generally considered the best way to draw more attention. The last three are tricky because they're dependent on what other people happen to be looking for. Try to think about what terms other people would use when searching for answers to questions like yours and include those terms/phrases in your question. The home page used to list questions by "most recently asked", and asking at certain times of day would attract more views than others. The front page feed is now tailored to each user's specific preferences, so it's a lot harder to break into that list.
It's also important to make your question something that other users want to read. Users don't always have time to read an extremely long or detailed question. Similarly, users are less likely to take the time to write answers when the question requires answers that are long, open-ended, or that require writing a lot of code. The way that points are structured on this site incentivizes people to answer a larger number of smaller, simpler questions over a smaller number of longer, more difficult questions.
Speaking of the point system, I've found that having a higher reputation makes it more likely that your question gets read and responded to. The site has lots of users who create an account, ask a low-quality question, and are never heard from again (they don't even mark an answer as accepted). Because of that, the temptation for a user with limited time is to read the questions of higher-reputation users since they're more likely to be better questions. Spend some time answering questions and build up a decent-sized reputation pool. Aside from making people more likely to read your questions, you'll be better suited to add bounties as needed.
Specifically regarding the question you linked above: your comments indicate that you're hoping for answers that are better than the existing one. In my experiences, few people take the time to add an answer to a question that already has an accepted answer unless the accepted answer is incorrect, missing something critical, or is no longer the best solution due to changes in technology (new language features, etc). The question is seen as not needing an answer any more, and the asker is much less likely to return and upvote/accept a newly-posted answer. This is even more true when the asker answers their own question. Your answer there is extremely long, which means very few people are going to read all the way through it, decide that they can do better, and take the time to write up a new answer. That's definitely not saying that your answer is bad, it's actually one of the most complete and detailed answers that I've seen in a while (good use of ASCII art by the way). That question, as it currently stands, appears to be answered and complete, and is thus unlikely to attract new answers.