I keep running into questions titles which may be potentially interesting, but then the problem is actually about a syntax, or some other basic error.
For example, I assumed scalar-product-of-vectors-two-in-nasm-and-c, might have an interesting assembly code challenge. However, it turned out the real 'question' was "I have some syntax errors but I don't know why."
If it was a pure 'gimme-teh-codez' question, I'd have no hesitation voting to close it. But sometimes the problem is actually instructive. In this case, the assembler's preprocessor behavior can cause non-obvious syntax errors. However,
- The question has absolutely nothing to do with vector products, so it's useless to people who find it in a title search.
- People who are trying to solve similar syntax errors won't ever find this solution.
In these cases, does it make sense to change the questions title to something like "Syntax Error in NASM", or "Why does NASM say 'comma or end of line expected'" or some such? Or are these titles even less useful?
:P