I view SO as a matching engine between problem posters and responders.
User A has two actions: i) posts problem P to SO (cheap, quick, done) ii) continue to do random research to solve problem P (expensive, but ongoing, happens anyway)
Often a response to a problem P by some User B will be "I recommend action ii)". Which is quite strange thing to recommend since it is basically like a matching engine matching non-crossed bid and ask where the participants say too-expensive/too-cheap and get annoyed with each other for the matching engine wasting time.
What is the goal here? Surely the proper way to deal with this is to let these questions sit on the market untouched? Why match questions with individuals who are just going to say "don't use SO".
I could give many other weird examples of failure states of the matching engine but I will keep it to this one example here and cover others in separate questions in meat.
A user below has asked me to INCREASE SPEND on this question already by providing an exemplar. I do not mind too much since the effort is bounded however I worry about over-fitting to the exemplar.
Example:
Q: How do you dig a Hole using a Half Spade in EarthLanguage? R: I recommend reading the Hole docs.
Let's assume that the poster does have the ability to read the docs and discover an answer in some finite time. This bounds the cost but that is all. OBVIOUSLY the poster is coming to SO to post something quickly in the hopes of a lower cost path to a solution while they continue to read and look elsewhere to figure out their problem. So we might say the poster is asking "I'm looking to buy X for less than 100 bucks" and then someone response "how about 100 bucks?".
I would agree that telling someone a) this is solvable in the docs b) showing them how to find the solution are both helpful and good. But then is this answer not a meta-answer and the whole thing belongs in Meta?