Asking for help about code environment as Java users will ask with eclipse or intellij
I see no evidence of this in the text of the question. No particular environment is mentioned; OP simply wants to develop for PS4, with no idea of what that entails, or indeed of whether any particular IDE is required, officially supported, provided along with the official dev tools, etc. etc. etc.
A useful question that interests people. We can see it has views and upvotes.
Received answer from some people, so can be answered
These things can be just as easily said about, say, the the food safety canonical on cooking.SE. They also are completely and utterly irrelevant as long as the question is unsuitable for other reasons.
I honestly would have voted to close as "not about programming". For a question to be about "a specific programming problem or software algorithm", OP needs to either have explained a problem and asked about algorithmic analysis or some language-agnostic programming concept, or (the much more common case) identified a specific programming language in which the code either is or will be written. To be about "software tools commonly used by programmers", similarly, OP needs to have a specific tool in mind already, and a specific problem related to that tool.
Also, if I want to ask question with similar objective (but not similar context), should I create it in Stack Overflow? Or in another website of SE?
Anywhere on SE, you would still need to refine the question considerably. Other SE sites are not discussion fora any more than Stack Overflow is - the Q&A format is not intended for this kind of open-ended query. "any advice, hint or whatever if appreciated." is not a question and "Needs More Focus" is a network-wide closure reason rather than a community-specific one. The question "is this possible" is unclear - what possible obstacle does OP have in mind? Is this about whether people are legally allowed to do this? Whether a programming language exists for the purpose? Something else? The implied question is "what do I need to know in order to begin development?", which, again, is far too open-ended. The standard reminder about research also seems apropos here.