This may sound general but it isn't. I frequently find respondents who second-guess the OP or even worse assert that the best/better/correct method lies outside the spec posted by the OP.
Here's a specific example.
Is there an “exists” function for jQuery?
The OP asked a jQuery question. Not a JavaScript question, not a JavaScript-flavored question, but a jQuery question. Note the bandwidth given to user Magne (39 upvotes). A lively debate ensues in the comments on the post. This is only the first person to actually answer the question in this way.
If I work in a jQuery environment I may not have vanilla JavaScript accepted at all; it's also possible I may have asked a simple use-case question in pursuit of higher philosophical aims. I could call on a million different reasons why I might ask for a specific technology, context, or application in my question.
So why should I have to take my bandwidth to explain such things after saying "in jQuery" in my original question?
Whether it's a straight-up question or an artfully procured question, I don't believe either one expects or gains too much by suggesting that the methodology employed is wrong unless it is inherently wrong.
I do not feel it is appropriate for language-bashing to occur. Neither should it be silently tolerated for so many upvotes on a non-use-case answer as provided in my example.
OK, maybe I don't really want admins reviewing upvotes... but if there were more subtle moderation of such events in the community, it could continue to promote valuable digression and philosophical expansion- without providing tacit approval for second-guessing an OP which seems to be rampant here.
Opinionated programming and frameworks are one thing, and I definitely fall into this category of programmer more often than not... but this regular occurrence is one of my biggest pet peeves here on the site.