The renewed vigor in 'finding ourselves' has led me question some of the principles I've always thought Stack Overflow 'was'. The recent backlash against homework questions, 'beginner' questions, and questions that don't show any research are some examples of recent community discussion. Our unspoken rules have varied slightly throughout the years, but one of them has been that as long as a question adds value to the corpus of programming knowledge (even if only through its answer) it is welcome*. This implies value, but you won't see that on Stack Overflow's help page -- it's implicit. One of those things that we can't point to, but we all assume is there. Sort of like a donut hole, if you're the philosophical type. That got me to thinking, what are the table stakes for a question to be asked on Stack Overflow? What are the minimum things we expect out of a question that gets asked? What *should* be the minimum expectations on our end? The following are what I believe (from being around the community) to be our minimum requirements for questions; and how they dovetail into the tenets of Stack Overflow: 1. Questions should be written so that they value for future visitors. If a question isn't likely to be searched for (Because of how it's written), it should be edited or closed). 2. Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum; it's a Q&A site. There are a whole subset of programming related topics that aren't suitable for our format (example: List of X, "What's your favorite", "translate this for me") 3. All information needed to solve a problem should be contained in the question itself 4. If you don't understand your question well enough to articulate the problem you're facing, you're not yet at the point where you should be asking about it on Stack Overflow (Example: Massive code dump followed by "Any suggestions?") 5. Questions should be focused around a single topic. 6. Questions should be able a practical, articulable problem a person faces (we don't have a close reason for this). what do you think? What should our minimum requirements for questions be? What are we missing?