This proposal, like many others before it, all suffer from the same fatal flaw:

 > determine a minimal understanding

Let me be as blunt as I can here.

# "Minimal understanding" is _subjective_.

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I'm a software engineer with five years of experience in the industry.  I've participated on this site for a little over five years.  When I first came on, the understanding I had was limited to what I knew from college course work and my own experimentation with Python, and I used that to great success.

When I asked my [first question](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8640701/python-optimizing-code-using-sqlite3-mutagen) here, ***any number of arguments*** could be made that I didn't have a "minimal understanding" of what the problem domain was.

 - Was the issue IO bound or CPU bound?
 - Was I experienced enough to understand any potential answers coming my way?  (Obviously not)
 - Would I get the most value from an answer here, or would I be better served on some godforsaken forum elsewhere?

Or what about [one of my more recent questions](https://stackoverflow.com/revisions/44599053/40)?  An argument could be made for me not having a "minimal understanding" of the framework I'm using.

 - I had failed to check the actual produced JAR for any duplicates - I had thought that simply wasn't a thing.
 - I had considered the Oracle forums to see if they knew anything or had any insights, but stopped short due to their relatively slow response time and lack of cohesion.
 - ***Six*** answerers simply could not figure out what it was I was trying to get at, which led me to think that I was the one with the communication issue.  (Turns out, **they** were guessing *wildly*.)

Or what about [my worst question](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/33533816/how-would-i-go-about-getting-ajax-data-from-rails-and-render-it-back-in-rails)?  I had demonstrated some understanding of Rails, and none of the patterns that Rails teaches you even apply to something like this.  So, I sheepishly asked the community if they knew this was even *possible*.

 - Oh, I got slaughtered on this question.  Worse, there's nothing I can do to fix it; that was a job ago and that code base is long since gone anyway.


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So I'll say this again.

# "Minimal understanding" is *subjective*.

Of the three questions I've provided for you above, what test could possibly be administered to determine that a potential OP has some level of minimal understanding to even ask this?

Let me tell you what *wouldn't* be useful:

>  1. Name three programming languages.
>  2. Name a programming IDE.
>  3. What is 67 + (6*3 + 9)/2 - 1000?

**None of these questions tell you if the person is competent at programming, or capable of answering a test.**  And I truly doubt that any test that could do that would mean that we'd get *better* questions.  Quite the opposite; now that a decent-sized test has come up on Stack Overflow, we're not going to bother with Stack Overflow because asking is genuinely too much of a hassle.

I don't deny that there are a lot of crap questions out there.  But there's no way to pre-screen the kind of askers you get here that will truly evaluate their level of experience or intellect.

And we haven't even *begun* to talk about ESL...