I've only used Stack Overflow a few times, and I'm trying to understand the etiquette/purpose.
I asked a question today but my question was nearly instantly marked as duplicate. The mod/admin person who flagged it as duplicate was right though! I was asking a question about a very common topic.
However, the level of expertise/experience in the linked question was beyond my ability to comprehend (or maybe it's not actually what I need, I'm still trying to work that problem out). I was asking for basic guidance or maybe a link to further reading/resources. Or if I was lucky, a helpful stranger might give me a paragraph or two explaining how to address my problem specifically!
But now my question is closed, so there is zero chance anyone can respond.
If Stack Overflow is only for wiki/Q&A Knowledgebase style content, and not "helping some stranger who has a question"... could anyone please suggest a resource more suitable for general programming community help?
I'm not trying to rant or be bitter, I understand the value in pruning a site's content to only keep high-value content... better for search results, better for readers in the future, centralize knowledge, etc. And my question WAS a duplicate. But I'm wondering if other sites exist which -do- allow for duplicates / informal help. Or perhaps a partner/subsection of Stack Overflow?
dupe2021.stackoverflow.com
,dupe2022.stackoverflow.com
,dupe2023.stackoverflow.com
, ad infinitum. There would be warnings in advance - "dupe2021.stackoverflow.com is going to wiped off the Internet in 13 days and 17 hours. Do you want to post to dupe2021.stackoverflow.com?". There could be annual reports - "In 2022, we saved the Internet from 1,341,221 duplicate questions."