I have a title for this question:
Does MySQL optimize selected aggregations on related tables to avoid N+1?
I had to rename it. The original was:
Does MySQL optimize selected aggregations on related tables to avoid N+1 problem?
Which was not accepted for submission.
Many times I had to replace the word "problem" with the word "issue". It was accepted. Titles were descriptive like:
- GEvent / GUnicorn and the C10k issue (this one is mine)
- Strange out of memory issue while loading an image to a Bitmap object
- Youtube iframe wmode issue
The first one is mine, and although I used "issue", I wanted to use the word "problem" but with the meaning of a theoretical (or well-known design/technical, like C10k or N+1 as I noted) problem like:
- Traveling Salesman problem.
- "P <> NP?" problem.
- Hamiltonian Path problem.
- Dijkstra's Critical Path problem.
So: Why is the word "problem" so taboo, while words like "issue" are accepted, have fewer meanings, and such meanings collide with the "tabooed" version of "problem"? Has the theoretical meaning of "problem" been considered when the word was banned?