tl;dr is in the title.
Yes, this is another post from someone who's a little disgruntled at having what they thought was a reasonable question downvoted and closed. Please bear with me.
Imagine you are afflicted by a painful ailment. Having tried everything you can think of - even Googling for solutions - you decide to turn to your local healer.
The wind is howling as you arrive at the healer's hut, located far out in the woods (naturally). The healer is an old crone, but he's an expert in healing people. He's seen it all a thousand times over and then some. And thus you begin your consultation.
"Tell me the symptoms which cause your problem," he asks in his gravelly voice.
"Well, I've had a bit of a cough recently," you respond.
"Rubbish! A million and one illnesses have a cough as their symptoms! I need a more specific list of the symptoms which are causing your ailment, and only them."
You list of a bunch of symptoms. You have no clue if they're relevant or not, but you are experiencing them all.
"What am I meant to do with all that?" the healer interrupts. "That's nowhere near specific enough! If you think I'm going to trawl through that list of symptoms to try every combination in order to work out what is ailing you, you're barmy."
You're beginning to think that it may not just be you who's barmy.
He continues, "no, what I want is the specific symptoms which are related to your problem. No more, no less. And I'm not helping you until you provide them. What's more, if you try my patience one more time, I'm never going to even try to help you again."
"But how can I do that when I don't know what my problem is?" you protest.
"That doesn't concern me," he snaps, and he shuffles off to the other corner of the shack.
You give up and decide to go to the hospital.
Essentially, this is a bit what Stack Overflow feels like sometimes. Naturally, this post is motivated by my recent question: the cause of my problem turned out to be a fairly niche issue caused by a quirk in how OpenGL works, and it was rather difficult to track down the root cause of the problem. Any number of commenting a line out here or changing something there seemed to fix it, but I could not for the life of me work out what code would minimally reproduce it. (I have since edited the question such that it includes only this code, in the hope of having it reopened, but you can see what it looked like before in the history.)
On this site, people want questions accompanied by a minimal reproducible example. I understand this, and this is usually achievable, except sometimes, finding a minimal reproducible example is really difficult. This is especially true in graphics programming, where everything is linked with everything else through the giant OpenGL state machine, GDB becomes fairly useless, and the place where all the complicated code runs is on this isolated, opaque box.
When I come to this website with a problem, it is in the hope that you, the healers of the internet, will have seen an ailment like mine before and will be able to give me a nudge in the right direction, and, if I'm very lucky, outright cure my ailment. If I'm unlucky I'll receive no help, but this is fine - unlike some healers, you have no duty of care to me, and I cannot demand help from you. So what then does annoy me is when my question is dismissed as 'lacking debugging details' by people who couldn't care less about whether I receive help, and then closed to actually prevent anyone from helping me. (Luckily, this time round, one person was kind enough to help out in the comments and directed me to a relevant webpage which helped me solve my issue.)
I apologise; this has rambled a bit, but it boils down to: it's sometimes really difficult to form a perfect question. It then really stings when your question is downvoted for not being perfect (it's not about the rep, btw, it's about the feeling of rejection more than anything else). And then the final blow is to watch to the close votes coming in, so that you can't receive help, even when all the while you've been editing your question to try to improve it. Despite trying your hardest to ask a decent question, you're being spat on and shown the door. It feels like very few people care about helping; rather, many only care about feeling superior to imbeciles like me who ask what they see as low quality questions.
What's the solution to this ailment? I'm not sure. I'm not a healer.
#include
s, nomain()
, half a shader program, no window/context creation...it's just some code snippets that won't compile as-is.