On Mon, Dec 10, 2001 at 02:01:52PM -0300, Nicol?s Conde wrote: > Hello. > I don't mean to be rude with this, but i've noticed that few people > do their homework before posting. I've seen some questions over and over > again for which answers exist in the {manual pages | list archives}. > Looking for existing answers (IOW doing your own research) before > posting helps everyone: you learn about your OS and your computer, > becoming a better {admin | user}; and also reduces the amount of > messages received by subscribers everyday. > So, without wanting to ofend anyone, before you post a question > > 1. RTFM (Read The Friendly Manual) > 2. Search the {archives | HOW-TOs} > 3. Ask your local {Linux | Unix} guru (if you have one) > > and if this doesn't help (which I doubt) drop some lines to this list. > Thanks all, enjoy Linux.
Well put. One way to encourage this is to explain where you would look and find an answer before answering a question, if you even give the answer at all. If people see man, /usr/share/doc/, pointers to previous posts and similar resources mentioned a dozen times a day, they may be more likely to think of looking in these places before asking a question.