[Edited] NOTE: I've edited and rearranged the question to emphasize the issues. I don't care about links which describe why Stack Exchange does not allow shopping recommendations. I am simply claiming that My question does not fall into the category.
Ok, here it goes:
I asked a question on Stack Overflow last month, which got a close vote for being off-topic, and subsequently got no answers.
According to this (non-authoritative) interpretation of the "no shopping" rule, a question which asks whether a {hardware component, class of product, peripheral} meets [a] technical requirement should actually be considered on topic. Again, not that it came from the SE staff or moderators, but the interpretation feels right and it's the answer with most votes.
1. My question (here)
Is there a .NET WinForms charting library which supports progressive zooming (like Silverlight deep zoom, for example)?
2. Jeff's examples (described in the no-shopping article):
- Macbook Air vs. Macbook Pro?
- What’s the best dual-band wireless router?
- Dell GX280 Processor upgrade?
- What RAM should I buy?
- Nvidia or ATI video card?
3. A search for ".NET library" on Stack Overflow (first page only):
- Unit conversion library in .Net (+1, 2 answers)
- EDI library (+4, 5 answers)
- RSS library for .NET (+1, 6 answers)
- Enterprise library for .NET (+2, 2 answers)
- Class library of constants (+4, 10 answers)
- Ballistics library (+1, 2 answers)
- .NET library for pluralisation (+2, 2 answers)
- Mime library recommend (CLOSED) (+1, 1 answers)
So, a (non-representative) sample of questions (this is the first page only) shows that 7 out of 8 lazy shoppers not only get by without being closed, but they also get upvoted, and get at least 2 answers. All of these questions can be answered by a non-expert through a single Google search.
4. Summary
So, I asked a question which:
Does not ask for the best product.
Does not ask for a recommendation of a product, but instead a single product which supports a specific feature (which is objective and verifiable).
Does not ask for current state of the art for a family of products. The answer to my question, presuming that such library exists, will not be obsolete in a year. The feature is either there or it isn't.
Does not ask for a comparison of different products.
And still, it's being flagged as a request for a "shopping recommendation".
Does any one care to explain what I am missing?