Thank you for your confidence in our abilities! But have you read the Stack Overflow FAQ?

We get a lot of IT/network/computer/technical questions on here, but Stack Overflow is meant to be first and foremost a programmer's resource.

Yes, someone here might be able to help you, but you'll find that other forums more focused on your topic can give you a much better answer than a bunch of programmers. It's likely that your question will be downvoted, closed, and in some cases marked "offensive." It's not that we hate you, it's just that we're programmers and we like to keep our corn pops separate from our cocoa puffs.

In that vein, here are a bunch of other forums where you can get help:

(This list contains the top two forums for each category as voted for below.)

Check out the answers below for even more suggestions!


What forums can people go to to ask the questions that are off topic here? Please list only ONE forum per answer so votes can bring the best forums to the top.

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You should add doctype.com under the Web Design heading. – Jonathan Prior Nov 24 '09 at 16:06
this might be helpful: stackoverflow.com/questions/387797/… – CrazyJugglerDrummer Dec 27 '09 at 22:21
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mathoverflow.net for math? – Dean Jan 22 '10 at 4:41
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@Dean: Only for “serious” math. Perhaps there's room for a forum targeted more at people who aren't so strong; after all, SO is relatively welcoming to non-expert programmers… – Donal Fellows May 22 '10 at 10:11
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I was going to suggest expert-sex-change.com, then I realized that might not be such a great idea for two reasons. – Hello71 Jul 24 '10 at 17:14
I hope that putting links to SE 1.0 sites is allowed - I just put a link to Draw3Cards (Magic: the Gathering), after seeing that MathOverflow was linked. – ripper234 Sep 9 '10 at 9:48
Please remove Yahoo! Answers from the list. It is not even close to being even remotely helpful for anything. – George Edison Dec 6 '10 at 0:25
@George Edison: It's a great example of what we don't want StackOverflow to become. – JavaAndCSharp Jun 20 '11 at 21:50
@Java It's a great place to send people who don't fit in here. >;-D – Adam Davis Jun 21 '11 at 3:17
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Jul 23 '09 at 11:15

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1 Answer

I think this "question" goes against the basic tenet that drives Stack Overflow:

No matter what programming language you use, or what operating system you call home -- better programming is our goal.

Who are you to make the determination that my question about a topic you think isn't programming-related won't make me a better programmer? For that matter, who am I to say that your question about DNS or Subversion does or does not belong here?

I used to close questions when I thought they were not programming-related. I think a lot of times, the relationship between programming and the topic of the question is tenuous at best. And I used to act on that. Then I realized that closing questions that I thought fell outside the scope of SO was only hindering people, not helping them.

Programming is the foundation of those very topics that you mention as being better served by another forum. IT, software applications, networking--these are all programming topics. Otherwise, what are we programming and what do we have questions about? NP-completeness discussions and Jon Skeet worship only go so far.

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It's the thin end of the wedge though, the more you let in now, the more that will be let in in future until you can ask anything here. You have to try and draw the line somewhere, or the community will become too big and too diverse and the quality of answers will drop, making the site less useful. – Sam Hasler Nov 26 '08 at 19:25
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This question will also be useful if a questioner wasn't able to get a sufficient answer on SO. They might want to go to a more specific forum. If they do, I imagine they'll link back to their question, so this is a way of reaching out to these other communities and drawing them in to Stack Overflow – Sam Hasler Nov 26 '08 at 19:30
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I agree with Sam. It's a slippery slope argument, and that has its drawbacks, but we also need to understand that there's always a balance to be maintained, otherwise it becomes less useful. If we get too far in any direction the backlash would be bad, so we need to constantly, gently moderate it. – Adam Davis Nov 26 '08 at 19:32
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Jeff Atwood has edited the question, so I don't think he has a problem with it. – Sam Hasler Dec 1 '08 at 12:11
Jeff is letting the SO community figure things out for themselves. – Robert S. Dec 1 '08 at 17:00
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Actually, by Godel's incompleteness... any formal system (and SO is one) that is fully consistent cannot be complete. So asking this question actually helps make SO have more programming questions. If consistent - only computer questions - then the forum is incomplete at "improving programming" – Overflown Dec 7 '08 at 6:34
@1alstew1, whatever helps you sleep at night. – Robert S. Dec 9 '08 at 3:27
discussion questions, are obvious in that they are not meant to be answered. – m4bwav Jan 30 '09 at 23:25
@m4bwav, ok, but what does that have to do with my answer? – Robert S. Jan 31 '09 at 2:28
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totally agree. For me the really hard parts of programming are where it touches other tech I'm less familiar with like networking, database, and OS configuration. My web app is useless if I can't configure IIS to run it, or connect my customer's pc to the server. – Daniel Feb 4 '09 at 21:31
Downvoted this answer in order to hinder it, not help it. – mquander May 6 '09 at 18:16
is there a reason questions can't just be transferred to serverfault or superuser instead of having to be closed here? leaving a bookmark on that user's profile page to the new location? – Maslow Jun 30 '09 at 13:05
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There's got to be a limit. Where we each draw the line varies, and that's ok, but otherwise we'll end up with "what is the cutest pony wallpaper" questions, which are at least as programming-related as "what music do you listen to while writing regex" – Steven A. Lowe Jul 24 '09 at 14:22
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