Why is it that people, who are not very experienced on the site, find it a good idea to answer such questions rather than ask for clarification, make a comment, or flag?
Well, let's take a look at why that might be.
Flagging
Moderation privilege awarded at 15 reputation
https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/flag-posts
In order to flag a post, you need to get yourself some reputation, which you get by answering questions.
Also, it's not like flagging is simple and people just inherently know how to flag or what to flag. Within the above article, there's another five articles linked to explain what the reasons for flagging are. "Not an Answer" is straightforward enough, but two of those articles have at least a dozen links to other articles which likely have links to other articles, so how much of this should people really read before they flag something? I have quite a bit of experience in using the various Stack Exchange sites, in rep and years, yet I find the flag wording confusing and have had some of my flags rejected for various reasons. I used a custom flag in the past year because I couldn't find one that fit, yet it was declined and the moderator basically yelled at me for not using a standard flag.
So really, it's no wonder that a 1-point user wouldn't have flagged a post.
Comments
Communication privilege awarded at 50 reputation
https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/comment
Again, you have to get reputation to make a comment, so how do you get that without answering questions?
A user can't ask for clarification without the ability to comment. I've seen people ask a comment type question in an answer, then get downvoted and deleted with comments about how comments shouldn't be in answers.
Gaining reputation points
To answer my own question above, editing can gain a user rep, but that has to go through a review queue and if the low rep user doesn't know this system well, then how can we expect them to improve questions by their edits? And in a review queue, changing a question with bad grammar can be tricky and the change denied due to the reviewer thinking it changed the OP's intent since the reviewer couldn't understand the OP's intent, just like you can't.
A user can also ask a question, but that's not exactly easy to do while getting upvotes. I've been on SE/SO for nearly a decade and I've only asked a handful of questions across all the 55 Stack Exchange sites I'm a member of. That's not because I know everything, it's because I try really {expletive} hard to find an answer before going through the third degree of asking a question. And some of the questions I've asked have gotten down votes, closed, and/or deleted because they didn't "meet criteria", including rules I'd never heard of even with my experience here.
People talk about "curated content" here and demand that only "good questions and answers" remain, while also complaining about why people can't get reputation to help do the curation is pretty hypocritical, IMO. To put it plainly, you can't downvote (removing rep from people) as well as not upvote (not giving people rep) then complain about how people don't have rep. I've definitely heard that people should just ask better questions and write better answers, yet the goalpost of what a good question and answer keeps moving, sometimes because someone else wrote a subjectively "better" answer. Or because there's another question that's similar, so one of them get becomes "the" duplicate, but an older question can become the duplicate if the newer one is subjectively "better" or had better answers. So yeah, the shifting sands of priorities and rules, and even rule enforcement, can make it really hard to get the reputation needed, as well as confusing as to how to follow "the rules" to get the rep.
The question
I'm not an English major or anything, but I can make a decent guess at what the question means by simply changing or adding a few words.
In object oriented programming are objects members of a class in C++? If not, classes are member of what?
OR
In object oriented programming are objects members of a class in C++? If not, what are classes members of?
Reading this can lead other users to answers, even if you can't get that far. We have a wide variety of users on this site that can make out better sense of questions than others. I've seen questions that made less sense and had well respected, high rep users answer it multiple times.
In fact, someone did edit the question to type to make it more clear.
In object oriented programming, are objects a member of a class in C++? If not classes, what are they a member of, if anything?
The answer
While the current answer isn't exactly perfect, it does give a decent explanation that a beginner could understand and can build off of. Of the three comments on that answer saying how bad the answer is, you don't see any of them actually giving their own answer, yet they are all high rep users that shouldn't have any problems giving a correct answer that would likely get them upvotes. Unfortunately, that's not the culture here.
The current idea is to not answer questions unless they are perfect and to complain about other people's answers that also aren't 100% perfect. This fits in perfectly with the original question complaining about why people aren't commenting or flagging when they don't have the rep to do so. It amazes me that people can see all that and wonder why people feel unwelcomed here, but that's a whole different (multiple) topic.
Introducing the Staging Ground, an attempt at improving the first-time asker experience - What was asking your first question like?
Problems with the Stack Overflow guidelines
Why do we reward users for answering bad questions and would it be a good idea to incentivize those who downvote or flag them instead?
Inscrutable
As a native English speaker with over 40 years experience, I had to look up the definition of that word.
not readily investigated, interpreted, or understood
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/inscrutable
Or maybe:
- incapable of being investigated, analyzed, or scrutinized; impenetrable.
- not easily understood; mysterious; unfathomable:
an inscrutable smile.
- incapable of being seen through physically; physically impenetrable:
the inscrutable depths of the ocean.
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/inscrutable
This makes me think the definition of inscrutable is itself inscrutable, since one definition says it's impossible to understand, yet another definitions says it's merely difficult to understand. If it's merely hard to do something, then it's clearly possible, so the definitions of this word aren't easy to understand when compared to each other. Also, what is "unfathomable" or "mysterious" to one person can be understood and commonplace to another. For example: my father thinks writing software is unfathomable, yet I have a fairly deep understanding of it.
You complain about the "cryptic title", yet you used a word that's not commonly used, IME, so that makes your title cryptic to me. Maybe you should rethink your own title to make it more clear to others.
Anyway, I guess you'd say that your question is inscrutable to me because you used a word I didn't understand until I looked up its definition, which still leaves me with questions. Should I have answered it based on your own metrics for answering questions? I guess not, but you wouldn't have learned anything if I hadn't. (Well, hopefully you are learning something from this answer.)
meta
would also give the new user a chance to learn and improve