Documentation is usually written on the (implicit) assumption that the person reading the documentation understands the concepts involved, has no prior misconceptions about them which need to be cleared up, and is able to use their knowledge to make correct inferences about how the factual statements in the documentation apply to particular examples.
For a large number of programmers, especially novices, those assumptions are not all true, so we can't say that if only they had read the documentation, then they wouldn't have needed to ask their question. Consider this example:
Why is -3 ** 2
equal to -9
but when I write x = -3
then x ** 2
is 9
?
The confusion is purely about syntax: the asker thinks -3 ** 2
means (-3) ** 2
when it actually means -(3 ** 2)
. And surely the docs will say that the **
operator has higher precedence than the unary -
operator, which is essentially the answer. But for this part of the docs to clear up their question, the asker would need to already understand:
- What "operator precedence" means,
- That the
-
operator in their code is the "unary" -
operator,
- That the problem is caused by incorrect operator precedence and not some quirk that causes different behaviour for literal values vs. variables,
- That, mathematically, the result
9
is the correct one, so the problem is in the first expression, not the second one.
Of course, if they were asking this exact question then you could close it as a duplicate of an existing question because there are lots of people who have asked this exact question before. In that case you might judge that a downvote is justified because they (apparently) didn't look for existing answers to their exact question. But there are lots of analogous syntax-based questions where there is some part of the docs that answers the question, but it only answers the question if you already understand the answer, as it were. For questions like that, Stack Overflow Q&As can be valuable for the many programmers whose current understanding is not sufficient to get that value from the docs.