A lot. Asking a question on Stack Overflow should be the *last* step in your process for finding an answer - if the information that you need already exists, then you very much want to find it. You want to - Search. Like mad. - Test your code. - Troubleshoot. - Read blogs. - Find books. - Follow tutorials. From [how to ask][1], emphasis mine: > Sharing your research helps everyone. **Tell us what you found and why > it didn’t meet your needs.** This demonstrates that you’ve taken the > time to try to help yourself, it saves us from reiterating obvious > answers, and above all, it helps you get a more specific and relevant > answer! [1]: https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask After you have reached the end of your rope and can no longer bear the pain of not having the answer, that's when you can go ahead and ask. Because at that point, you will have hopefully done whatever research necessary to make it a good question worth asking. You'll have notes you can share to help inform the folks answering as to what you need. You'll have the necessary background information to *understand* those answers when they arrive. You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading it won't get frustrated by having to close it. --- The important point remains that the whole reason the site was created was so that askers can save time. We absolutely want you to do your homework, but our time is not free either, and we do not charge for it. Answering low quality, poorly researched, or duplicated questions becomes tiresome; however, do not be intimidated into withholding good questions simply because you don't hold a computer science degree in the subject, or are concerned about the precious minutes it would take away from "our busy schedule". This is Stack Overflow, ask away!