I ask a question about native complex number support in programming languages. Within literally seconds I had three downvotes and four votes to close on the following grounds:
This question is not a good fit to our Q&A format. We expect answers to generally involve facts, references, or specific expertise; this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion.
Within minutes the fifth vote was there (along with another downvote) and the question is closed. Now looking at the explanation given, I'm smelling ... well, bullshit, to put it bluntly. Let's address this one by one:
- Facts. A programming language either has native support for complex numbers or not. This is a purely factual condition.
- References. I'm sure that programming language manuals count as references. Like this reference to Python's documentation
- Specific expertise. Call me crazy, but I'm pretty sure that you need expertise with a programming language to know if it supports complex numbers natively or not.
- Opinion. There is no room for opinion here. Either complex numbers are a native data type or not. I'm not asking if it's good or bad here. I'm asking for simple existence: yes/no. I'm not seeing how opinion enters into things.
- Debate. Again, how do you debate whether a language supports complex numbers or not?
- Arguments. Yet again, how can you argue something that's a simple yes/no?
- Polling. What? You think people are going to vote on whether or not SNOBOL4 supports complex numbers natively? (Hint: no it doesn't.)
- Extended discussion. And yet again: how?
Seriously, I'm at a loss here. I cannot even begin to fathom the how and why of this closing. Can anybody perhaps give me a hint, even if that hint is "the Wikipedia fascists have taken over Stack Exchange"?