What is the word for individuals who unwittingly post very similar questions asking for the same words, without doing any previous research?
Many newcomers on EL&U post very similar single-word-requests, all asking for more or less the same words. The two main categories appear to be asking about verbosity and thriftiness.
What is the word for:
Users who don't do any previous research and unwittingly post similar questions on Q&A websites that have been asked in the past; but receive the same single-word answers?
I Googled: users "ask the same type of questions" on Q&A websites that produce the same answers, but the hits were unhelpful.
A sample sentence:
Oh, here's another ________
This may seem like a facetious single-word-request, but I really want to know if such a word exists. Failing that, an idiom or pithy expression that can substitute my description will do very nicely. I would use this word or concise phrase whenever the topic of single-word-requests crops up on EL&U meta.
EDIT
There seems to be a slight confusion as to whom or what I am referring. So one last clarification. I am looking for a word, or short phrase, or idiom that means:
Different users who unwittingly ask new questions that are similar to ones that have been asked in the past, and whose answers are nearly always the same.
Related, but they didn't answer my question: Word for disrespecting eldest half-sister by referring to her husband as girly-girl-manly-boy though he's amused but the rest of the family isn't?
Word for someone who wants to find a single word to describe a relatively obscure concept, and posts such questions on internet boards?
Solution 1:
lepidopteran
This is both an adjective and noun, and relates to Lepidoptera:
An order of insects that comprises the butterflies and moths. They have four large scale-covered wings that bear distinctive markings, and larvae that are caterpillars.
Butterflies flit (in an apparently unwitting way) from plant to plant to feed on nectar or deposit eggs, while moths typically are attracted to bright lights at night. Neither butterflies nor moths do any research.
A Google Books search reveals that the term lepidopteran has only ever been used in a scientific context. For example, page 134 of Insect Pest Management notes that:
There are no recorded examples of vertical resistance to Lepidopteran pests which have a strong flight capability...
The metaphoric use of the term to describe people who post very similar questions asking for the same words without doing any previous research has no precedent. It would be used in a sentence thus:
Oh no, here's another lepidopteran post.
Solution 2:
On StackOverflow, and later on several others StackExchange, they have sometimes been referred to as "Help Vampires".
Quoting from Amy Hoy's A Spotter’s Guide:
- Does he ask the same, tired questions others ask (at a rate of once or more per minute)?
- Does he clearly lack the ability or inclination to ask the almighty Google?
- Does he refuse to take the time to ask coherent, specific questions?
- Does he think helping him must be the high point of your day?
- Does he get offensive, as if you need to prove to him why he should use Ruby on Rails?
- Is he obviously just waiting for some poor, well-intentioned person to do all his thinking for him?
- Can you tell he really isn’t interested in having his question answered, so much as getting someone else to do his work?
Help Vampires are a bit broader than what you ask, and this identification checklist is targeted at devs, but people you describe are definitely fitting in that category.
Solution 3:
We used to have a close reason called "peeving disguised as a question", which I think would be appropriate here. There is a problem with the question though, which is the assumption that something can make people stop asking questions that other people had. The fact that people have questions that are the same as other people is the entire reason we have this site. For SWR FAQs I have to wonder if there isn't some difficulty in formulating the question such that Google can answer it.
But in any case I think the word for someone who asks an FAQ is, or should be, faqqer.