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If I have a question about tools or process that I'm unable to find out on my own, it seems obvious that sparking a subjective discussion about "one way over another" or "how do YOU store environment variables in a sinatra app?" would be helpful to the community. Especially if noobs and wannabe programmers like myself want advice.

Aside from preventing clutter and flame, what's the point?

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From what I can tell, the idea is that Stack Overflow is primarily a place to get your questions answered. That's just what it is. Discussion is not what the system is designed for, and subjective questions tend to provoke discussion and argument, as they will almost always have subjective answers. You cannot really, definitively answer such a question, so it doesn't really have a place in the Stack Overflow model.

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    I have to disagree. Being subjective does not always mean that discussion, argument, and opinions can not be insightful. Jan 21, 2015 at 22:20
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    @LoneCoder yet, most of the time devolve into one of those.
    – Braiam
    Mar 7, 2017 at 16:25
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I'm a little late here, but subjective questions and other questions that would generate a lot of discussion fundamentally aren't a good fit for a Q&A format.

Also keep in mind that Stack Overflow fundamentally tries to aggregate knowledge (i.e. concrete information), not just discussion or people's opinions. While extended discussion of an opinion-based question may be interesting, I'd argue that it's a lot less useful to future readers than fact-based Q&A (especially to people who are trying to solve a specific, concrete programming problems, which is the primary focus of Stack Overflow).

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