This is a three-stage question/process.
- you have to decide whether the question is on-topic on Stack Overflow (regardless of the language tag and community)
- you have to decide whether it is on-topic on another community
- you have to have people on that other community willing and able to answer those questions.
In this particular case, your prolog questions are requests for code review. There is no specific problem in the code, and, as a result, it is off-topic on Stack Overflow. This is the exact reason why Code Review was 'created', to handle these types of questions which do not fit well with the Stack Overflow scope.
Then, it is clear that Code Review is the "right" place for questions like your reviews. We would love to have them.
The real question is whether we have a strong enough Prolog community to answer such questions. As you said, your question from a month ago has gone unanswered there. So, why is that? I suggest it's because the prolog community has been too nice, and too accomodating here on Stack Overflow. Instead of answering code review questions on Code Review, they are answering them here on Stack Overflow.
I would love for the community to expand on Code Review. There are benefits for everyone:
- people with review questions are less confused about where to ask
- people get the answers they want with less fear about being closed as off-topic
- answerers get rewarded more in terms of reputation (Code Review has a somewhat different mind-set when it comes to voting).
Code Review answers are hard to make short (in either time, or words), and as a result they require some investment from the answerer. The answers are also normally not presented in a way that makes them generally useful as targets of search engines, etc. Good Code Review answers are never good answers for Stack Overflow (for a close approximation of "never" anyway).
So, I encourage your prolog community to at least "follow" the prolog tag on Code Review. There are just 16 questions, I know, and the volume is small... but, with a few interested people, the community will become useful, and thriving. By following the tag, you get an e-mail "soon" after a prolog question is asked. If it interests you, great. I have seen it happen with other tags (VBA anyone?).
The ideal solution would be to have questions asked in the right places. To get this right, there needs to be awareness, and support. That can only happen when people do the right thing (ask and answer questions in the sites where they are on topic).