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I understand the pollution caused by too broad questions in a site trying to solve immediate and practical programming problems. However, I also must admit that these kind of questions (and respective answers) are the ones I most learned from.

Actually, if I have to know how to format a date, I usually go to the documentation of the library. Human support deserves parsimonious use, i.e. to questions with no exact answer or when some degree of wisdom is needed.

With all these points in mind, is there, or could be there, a place to ask open-ended questions?

Some context: there are questions that are not exactly specific, and are also not exactly open-ended. Are they condemned to stay in limbo? By now, the way Stack Overflow is, I think much wheat is being cut with the chaff.

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6 Answers 6

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There are three types of broad questions that you can ask on SE site that you can't ask on Stack Overflow.

  1. Code review questions for code that works. That is covered on codereview.stackexchange.com

  2. Conceptual questions. That is covered on softwareengineering.stackexchange.com*

  3. Workplace questions. That is covered on workplace.stackexchange.com

These might not be the broad questions you want to ask, but there is a place for them.


*This site was previously named "Programmers".

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    And yet on each of those sites there is still a limit to how broad questions can be. Questions like the examples the OP gave are not only not covered by any of those three topics (the topic of the question is in fact correct for SO), but also still way too broad for any site, even if the topic were to be a match for them.
    – Servy
    May 1, 2014 at 15:11
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    @Servy - I agree Servy, that is why I added the last line. Iff the OP does not know about these sites, I expect they will be of use to him.
    – Hogan
    May 1, 2014 at 15:12
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    @Hogan - Programmers site is pretty strict as well. They do not want opinion-based answers either. In my (not so humble) opinion conceptual questions can be rarely answered with with just hard facts.
    – PM 77-1
    Aug 17, 2014 at 16:57
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    @PM77-1 - Times change as do expectations. Programmers is much harsher now than they were at the time.
    – Hogan
    Aug 18, 2014 at 19:32
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    What about design questions? These questions are sometimes flagged as open-ended or subjective. While they are not quite as crisp and objective as questions about problems with some tool, they are not quite invitations to wide open discussion either. Almost all design questions admit more than one possible answer, and all most all design principles have exceptional cases where they should be overlooked. Jul 10, 2015 at 9:54
  • @WalterMitty - You can try programmers or codereview -- a design document might be interesting to the code review guys, you could also go to the meta of those sites and ask there first if you don't want to post a question that gets closed.
    – Hogan
    Jul 10, 2015 at 17:56
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    For myself, I am primarily interested in answering database design questions. These questions usually crop up in DBA or SE. Some of the best questions, IMO, get downvoted or closed as too broad or subjective. Also, questions that are "cloaked duplicates" never get flagged as such because, on the surface, they look completely different. Jul 10, 2015 at 18:20
  • I asked a conceptual question on software engineering, and I got deleted a few hours later.
    – A.Rashad
    Aug 22, 2017 at 13:41
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    @A.Rashad -- It is hard to respond to this comment without knowing what you asked, there could be many reasons it was closed.
    – Hogan
    Aug 22, 2017 at 17:45
  • It was a general inquiry about the existence of a language imposing TDD as part of its syntax, so that you are to write test cases along with implementation of the method as part of a method declaration. It was somehow considered a language specific question and was deleted in less than 24 hours since I wrote it
    – A.Rashad
    Aug 22, 2017 at 20:08
  • @A.Rashad -- you wanted to know if such a thing existed? That isn't a conceptual question it is a research question. Research questions and lists (What are the top 10...?) are not allowed on any site (as far as I know).
    – Hogan
    Aug 24, 2017 at 14:14
  • Is there a location one can ask questions about where to find tools or code of a general category that cannot be easily found by search engine? Nov 15, 2017 at 16:24
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    Also worth mentioning is the Software Recommendations SE
    – MoxieBall
    Jul 25, 2018 at 16:47
  • Stackoverflow is full of mere debugging questions. I think good open-ended questions about a concept or a code pattern would be much more valuable and more likely to help other developers than ultra specific debugging questions that helps two people at most (the one who asked that solves his problem and gets 2 points and the one who answered that gets 15 points). Jun 14, 2019 at 15:43
  • This post is incomplete and encourages moving broad, off-topic questions to other network sites. This is a real problem. More information is necessary to make this a valuable answer. Links to each network site's how to ask and on topic pages is a step forward. How about theoretical/conceptual computer science questions? CS SE is more appropriate than SWE SE.
    – ggorlen
    Jun 9, 2020 at 15:29
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There are lots of places where you can ask open-ended questions - more traditional forums, for example.

However, none of these places are Stack Exchange sites.

We focus on Questions and Answers - not discussions. That's what drove (and is still driving) the design decisions behind the site and how it works.

Coercing this format into a discussion platform will hurt this goal.

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Quora is pretty neat, and you don't spend 80% of your time arguing why your question is acceptable for the site.

Edit: this is not true anymore. Quora sucks, not because of their moderation policy, but because they went overboard on monetization and are no longer really a questions/answer platform.

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    At last! An actual answer that isn't "no"! Feb 8, 2017 at 3:35
  • The downside to Quora is the answers are pretty much never direct. Then you do get into arguments about why the other person's credentials doesn't mean that they're right. Nov 15, 2017 at 16:25
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    With the removal of question descriptions I would say Quora no longer fits this description.
    – Rob Rose
    Mar 8, 2018 at 2:39
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    Quora is a spam magnet when you need a recommendation. For general questions, seems ok
    – T.Todua
    May 8, 2018 at 21:51
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    God, i hate quora, but love the gist of your answer.
    – Ray
    Sep 23, 2018 at 2:55
  • In my experince, Quora is (still?) good because there are some very good authors there. However, since they limited the whole question to just the subject line, you really cannot ask any complex questions there anymore. Some could argue that it's good for open endedness factor, but for me, the quality of Quora is going down. I think there would be space for Quora with stackexchange logic (reputation needed to do some stuff, ability to ask complex questions, ability to edit questions and answers with high enough reputation). The hard part is bootstrapping it without trolls and crap. Jun 23, 2021 at 12:16
  • If stackoverflow / stackexchange should copy one feature from Quora, it would be having some kind of automatic smart search / AI that suggests interesting questions and answers to read. Of course, they need to do lots of profiling to be successful in this. I think this is the only part of Quora where they're really good. Jun 23, 2021 at 12:26
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    "Edit" does not belong in an answer (that is what the edit history is for). Instead, make the answer appear as if it was written today. For instance, by converting the first paragraph/sentence to paste tense (as a side effect, it would also tell a story about the rise and fall of Quora). Jun 25, 2021 at 10:25
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"We already tried supporting those questions, we even gave them their own site. Sadly, it didn't work out.. C'est la vie.."

3 years ago, a Stack Exchange site called Not Programming Related came out of Area51, the Stack Exchange staging zone. NPR was supposed to be a site where questions that were too subjective / broad for Stack Overflow would find a new home. The site was greeted with enthusiasm, and in theory it looked like a perfect solution: Stack Overflow would remain as laser sharp focused as possible, and NPR would host all those exciting and sometimes helpful (but not really answerable) questions.

However, as it usually happens, theory and practice are two entirely different beasts. NPR's promise proved extremely attractive to people who were more interested in posting joke answers, or just repeating earlier answers, or posting outright crap (Do you fart in the cubicle?). It didn't take long for everyone to realize that the site was not working, and most people just didn't bother with it. Here's what Quantcast tells us for the first year of NPR's existence:

enter image description here

Tons and tons of people visited the site after it went public, but very few decided to stick around. For over a year, the site experienced no growth to speak of. And even fewer people contributed worthwhile content. Turns out that while everyone loves those questions, very few are actually willing to spend any time to answer them (seriously), and maintain and moderate them...

Further reading

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    Exactly a site with the opposite title is requested by OP: Programming Related (as SO is too strict Programming Only)
    – Pepster
    Sep 13, 2016 at 8:31
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So let's think about this for a minute. What is it that you're trying to glean from the Stack Exchange network?

Note that I'm not trying to sound condescending, but I will be breaking your question down a bit.

Can we have a learning/brainstorming/discussions (basic newbie questions) site?

This sort of site seems orthogonal to the model that Stack Exchange is trying to promote.

This site is all about getting answers. It's not a discussion forum. There's no chit-chat.

It also depends on the nature of the community as well; Stack Overflow, Programmers, and Code Review (to a lesser extent) all cover some piece of the spectrum that you're after, but they do so in such a way that wide-open discussion is less favored as opposed to more verifiable, concrete answers.

As to your point of answers providing detailed information (i.e. why this is a good approach), or lack thereof, this is where votes come in. A user can upvote an answer that they feel is specifically useful to others, and downvote those that aren't. For the most part, when I do answer a question, I try not to just provide a blob of code and assume that the asker is smart enough to understand what the snippet is doing; I'd try to break it down. If you see answers that aren't useful, don't be afraid to downvote them; that's even what the tooltip says.

This will reduce the number of possible duplicates as most users try to find code specific answers as compared to concept dependent answers.

I don't believe this. First, I'm not sure I see duplicates as much of a problem anymore, thanks to binding votes for gold tag holders; second, the applicability of the answer depends on the problem being addressed. If it's an algorithm that would efficiently search a two-dimensional array for the highest value, then code-oriented answers may actively do more harm than good.

Community rules on SO are strict and still users post very silly questions (even I have when trying to understand a new concept).

Yes. The community is strict. So strict, that there are some times in which I've felt it a bit too unforgiving. That's actually a good thing, as this keeps the quality of questions and answers high. (And we still get our share of poor questions.)

I don't see how a brainstorming site would alleviate the strictness, either. You have to do something to prevent people from asking how they could build a forum (obviously a sizable undertaking), or brainstorming about their next awesome MMO*.

Have this site specifically for concept oriented, but code supported questions rather than code oriented questions.

Not having code in a question is not necessarily bad. Discussing abstract concepts...well, that probably is. But depending on the concept being discussed, an audience could be found at Programmers.

Site providing learning opportunities through discussions (please don't say "refer to the documentation").

So this is where it kind of comes apart for me. I can appreciate and respect that collaboration and discussion with those who know more can further one's knowledge greatly. I'm a private CS tutor, and this is pretty much what I do for a few hours on a weekend.

But, in my experience, both as a professional developer, a tutor, and a Stack Overflow addict back in my Junior year of college, you can't just learn from a website.

You have to try stuff.

Don't be afraid to break things. And yes, there are going to be times in which the documentation is your best friend, since no one else is going to bother reading the code or understanding the problem space you're in.

No site can supplement actual hard experimentation and self-discovery.

*: Reminds me of my college days; I had a buddy that raved on and on and on about it. He never did make his MMO, which is kind of a pity.

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Questions as broad and open ended as you are describing would not be on topic anywhere on the network.

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    Not much explicative.
    – user445107
    Apr 29, 2014 at 19:14
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    @davips What else is there to say. You asked where they're acceptable. The answer is nowhere. Why waste your time saying anything more than that.
    – Servy
    Apr 29, 2014 at 19:29
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    They are however acceptable on non-SE site, mailing-lists and code-review sites.
    – smci
    Nov 11, 2016 at 13:43
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    Several sites on the Stack Exchange Network have a soft-question tag for less-specific questions. I often see this tag on Math Stack Exchange. Jan 24, 2019 at 9:11
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    @AndersonGreen Yes, as a lot of people have said, some sites are less restrictive than others, but none of the sites allow the types of questions that were asked about.
    – Servy
    Jan 24, 2019 at 14:20