Below you'll find the comments that are made on the question by various authors
rene:
I just took a quick peek at those: You don't seem to be a fan of providing code in your questions. For a site focused on coding problems don't you think that is strange?
Makoto:
Some of the questions ask for concepts; others ask for concretions. In the concrete questions, code would be helpful to further illustrate difficulties, but the concepts are a lot trickier since they're subjectively okay based on how familiar one is with the subject matter. For instance, if this particular question were asked with a Java context instead of C#, I doubt I'd have an issue with it...but that's really up to the people monitoring/watching the C# tag to decide
I personally would be alright with these if I were more familiar with the subject material. Truth be told, in regards to a question like this, I'd like to see some of the code you had written, but as a concept in and of itself, it's not terribly broad. It might be considered overly broad now because it's asking a lot, but I could see how this question could be good
Rad Lexus:
#6 is a bit too concise for my taste. #4 seems irrational, or possibly an X-Y problem ("Yes you can decode, and store only 1 in every 10 pixels. But you still need to decode them.") Ooh but the good part is, I like #3
Mike McCaughan:
That first question's first comment explains why it's downvoted. "I was trying to do this"? Really? You couldn't take the time to type even the name of the function you were calling? The fact that you were completely dismissive of that commenter's reason does not mean they were wrong. Also, you don't provide any background as to why you need to call that function or anything else. Luckily Cody Gray was able to divine your intentions.
Steve:
too concise. In 3 and 4 your terseness makes your question hard to understand. In 1 and 6 you reference information without summarizing it -- which is annoying. If at all possible, include code (#5 has code and wasn't downvoted!). Help the reader with context as in #2 you are talking xaml but one might think you're asking about .net/c#. So, in general, add more, relevant information. Think about being nice to the reader of your question. Ask yourself: what would they want? Usually, this is the same that you would want if you were the reader.
Name
as being a common property for controls.the concepts are a lot trickier since they're subjectively okay based on how familiar one is with the subject matter
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