On 7/27/25 4:11 PM, Anders Andersson wrote:
On Sun, Jul 27, 2025 at 5:39 PM Richard Owlett <rowl...@access.net> wrote:
More explicitly:
How should I [who has *ability* to hyperfocus mitigated by
distractibility {cf ADHD}] ask questions in this particular forum?
Why do I ask?
In my read with PDF related questions, my responses were essentially
"Why are you trying to do?" rather than an answer to to a narrowly
focused question.
A correct, but skew answer, could have been "to gain dietary information
to lower probability of another heart attack". Nutritionists had given
me answers that more a set of intermediary goals than actual things I
could apply to daily life.
I had discovered a USDA document[1] that came close to being useful and
was trying to think of a presentation format that would meet multiple
goals. I hadn't yet determined that format, thus could not answer
questions being asked.
In the meantime [GRIN]
I have discovered the source documents[2][3] used in preparing the
above. Now I have to relearn how to extract specific content from
spreadsheets. Something I haven't done in close to two decades.
But *THE* question remains.
How to ask narrowly focused questions which will get answers in this forum?
The Debian user mailing list is one of the worse examples in my
(limited) experience. Every question gets non-answered by a bunch of
people who don't really know about your exact situation, but think
they have some valuable input. Often the same bunch of people who then
ends up talking to each other. Comparing with for example the OpenBSD
user mailing list is like night and day.
For specific questions it may be better to try the stack exchange
network, which is designed for that purpose - weed out the "just my
two cents" people. It's easier to ignore non-answers, and people can't
keep adding on to them. There are of course different problems with
stack exchange, which is pretty bad when you just want advice or when
you don't know where to start looking.
That forum often has useful hits to my DuckDuckGo searches.
I've yet to grok how to navigate web based fora.