I personally think that all such questions are actively harmful both to the individual and the software industry as whole. Teachers should teach how to do things correctly. They should not teach how do avoid doing things correctly. Thinking outside the box is good - using a hammer for fixating a screw is not.
The repeated use of such artificial requirements by bad teachers has caused lots of those ugly work-arounds to become commonly used in production code, where they are actively causing harm every day.
Some examples from C/C++ programming, where such academia bad practice have also become common production code practice:
- Using obscure series of operators instead of the most readable version (like using bitwise operators instead of the
+ - * /
operators, or using XOR operator for byte swapping).
- Using recursion for things that could be trivially solved with loops.
- Using function-like macros for no reason, instead of proper functions.
- Excessive use of the
?:
operator in places where it leads to less readable code than if-else
.
- Using global variables instead of changing the definition of function parameters.
- Using spaghetti keywords like
goto
or continue
instead of plain loops.
- And so on, I can go on forever.
We might have to wake up and realize that SO is a major culprit in spreading such bad practice.
This is because of the site design. You aren't allowed to question the rationale of the OP. If you do, and post an example of how things actually should be properly done, you will get down voted and maybe even flagged as NAA. This for teaching people good practice and industry standard programming, making the software world better.
As an example, take this answer by yours sincerely. It has gotten 8 down votes because "it doesn't answer the question". I posted it as a "counter-example", since the question requirements didn't make any sense and following them would lead to bad practice. Not only making the OP a worse programmer, but also making every beginner who would encounter the post in the future a worse programmer too. (It would give the person reading the question and answers a misconception of how compilers actually translate and optimize code, causing them to obfuscate their code to gain some imaginary performance.)
So I fully support a policy change where questions with artificial requirements are made off-topic. SO should be a high quality site that you can turn to when you wonder how things should be done properly. Answers that teach good programming practice should be encouraged, not frowned upon.