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Almost two months ago I have answered a question related to a very specific tutorial where OP had some questions about it. While this tutorial exposes a good example it lacks a fundamental explanation about how every part works.

To be honest the title of the question is not wasn't the best and probably someone might have been tempted to flag the question as off-topic: JXLoginPane tutorial? Doubts related to JXLoginPane example Problems understanding the framework around a JXLoginPane example. That's probably what I would have done if I knew nothing of the subject. However (and fortunately I guess) it wasn't flagged and my answer was well received.

The thing is there are no good tutorial out there about this topic and I think Stack Overflow could be helpful in this sense. I mean not by writing an entire tutorial because that's not SO's purpose. I mean by making an exception with this kind of questions in this particular scenario and leaving them on-topic.

A matter of fact if I type "JXLoginPane tutorial" on Google the first result is the aforementioned question/answer:

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So, could this kind of questions be considered on-topic?


PS: I have read this related question but it's not exactly the same case as OP wasn't asking about some bug but for clarification:

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    You might want to consider the approach taken by the scala tag wiki.
    – user289086
    Sep 16, 2014 at 15:03
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    "To be honest the title of the question is not the best and probably someone might have been tempted to flag the question as off-topic" ... so, if it's not really asking for a tutorial, and your answer isn't really a tutorial, and the question isn't closed (yet) ... why didn't you edit the title?
    – Bart
    Sep 16, 2014 at 15:18

1 Answer 1

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It's not a question of whether it's on topic, it's a question of scope. Writing an entire tutorial on a topic is generally going to be "Too Broad" for an SO question.

If you want to write a tutorial on a topic that's great, SO probably just isn't the correct place to host that tutorial.

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  • Thanks for the answer, but does my answer look like an entire tutorial to you?
    – dic19
    Sep 16, 2014 at 15:08
  • @dic19 It sounded like you were asking if it's okay to write one. If you're not asking if it's okay to write a tutorial then what are you asking?
    – Servy
    Sep 16, 2014 at 15:27
  • Yes I realize that... My bad :( I've edited my question. Anyway I think nobody understood what I meant so I will probably have to make a better question.
    – dic19
    Sep 16, 2014 at 15:31
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    There are borderline cases though, where the question is thoroughly self-answered and intended as a canonical duplicate-target. Sep 16, 2014 at 15:39
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    @Deduplicator That's why I said "generally" and not "always". They can be written in such a way as to limit the scope enough to be an acceptable SO question, but doing so is quite hard, and in most cases the questions end up being too broad.
    – Servy
    Sep 16, 2014 at 15:41

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