Consider the question first
If the question deserves an answer, then offer an answer in the answer section. It is not a problem that a question can be asked briefly and answered briefly - as long as it is clear, focused, not a duplicate etc. Please refrain from link-only answers; excerpt the appropriate information from the target of the link (with appropriate attribution) and explain - in complete English sentences - how it applies to the situation described in the question.
If the question should not be answered as it stands, then the only good reason to provide an informational link is to demonstrate the issue with the question.
In this case
In the particular case of this post, a specific, focused question was asked (or at least implied):
I am not able to understand the use-case of "-l" after bc.
As such, a link to a service that parses the entire command does not address the question. When I try the link that you've offered, I find that in order to answer OP's question, I have to click through on the nested command ( echo(1) $x | bc(1) -l
), then scroll to the bottom, where I am simply given a citation from the man page -
-l, --mathlib
Define the standard math library.
This probably does not clarify things very much for someone who would post such a question.
As asked, the question is a duplicate, and properly closed as such. It is a poor signpost (the title does not highlight was is being asked; and the body of the post is written in noisy, discussion-forum mode that doesn't make the question explicit), and as such should probably be deleted (I cast a delete vote after making this assessment). But posting a link like yours is not productive in this context. It comes across as scolding OP for a lack of effort, whereas the only effort required here is in research - which should, ideally, have found the canonical. (The duplicate linked here doesn't seem to be particularly canonical; if there isn't a better canonical, then it should be improved and reopened - if there is, it should be hammered as well.)
But hypothetically...
If the question weren't like that - if the question were simply "I have a command printf "%.3f" $(echo $x | bc -l)
; what does it do?", then that would be closable (and, hopefully, quickly closed) as Needs More Focus. In this case, it's useful to comment to explain that questions like this need research in order to establish focus (and lack of an existing duplicate).
A link like yours is helpful, in that it highlights a useful resource for that kind of research, while also pointing out the kind of analysis that can be done in order to focus the question. Someone who puts a command like this into a service like explainshell.com, and still has a question, will now have an appropriate question - such as "what impact does 'defining the standard math library' have when using bc
?".
It is still appropriate, however, to comment more than just the link. The polite, courteous thing to do - rather than leave your meaning implied by the link itself - is to
- welcome new users;
- explain what is expected of questions here;
- explain what is wrong with the question as asked;
- show how services like this can be helpful.
In this hypothetical, I might have drafted the comment like so (and split it across multiple comments if necessary):
Welcome to Stack Overflow. Please read How to Ask and How much research is expected of Stack Overflow users?, and try to edit the question to be focused and specific. Questions simply asking to explain a code excerpt (such as a shell command) are not appropriate here. Instead, first try to figure out exactly what part of the code confuses you, and what confusion you have about it. There are online services that can help with this task.