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I recently had a questionquestion closed as being 'off topic.' I was under the impression that asking why a service I'm developing refuses to start with 'access denied' was fine, because the service control manager falls under 'software tools commonly used by programmers.'

If this isn't the case, how can I tell whether questions involving a tool are more appropriate for a different stack exchange? Is there some sort of definition of what constitutes a 'software tool commonly used by programmers?'

I recently had a question closed as being 'off topic.' I was under the impression that asking why a service I'm developing refuses to start with 'access denied' was fine, because the service control manager falls under 'software tools commonly used by programmers.'

If this isn't the case, how can I tell whether questions involving a tool are more appropriate for a different stack exchange? Is there some sort of definition of what constitutes a 'software tool commonly used by programmers?'

I recently had a question closed as being 'off topic.' I was under the impression that asking why a service I'm developing refuses to start with 'access denied' was fine, because the service control manager falls under 'software tools commonly used by programmers.'

If this isn't the case, how can I tell whether questions involving a tool are more appropriate for a different stack exchange? Is there some sort of definition of what constitutes a 'software tool commonly used by programmers?'

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How is it decided if something is a 'software tool commonly used by programmers?'

I recently had a question closed as being 'off topic.' I was under the impression that asking why a service I'm developing refuses to start with 'access denied' was fine, because the service control manager falls under 'software tools commonly used by programmers.'

If this isn't the case, how can I tell whether questions involving a tool are more appropriate for a different stack exchange? Is there some sort of definition of what constitutes a 'software tool commonly used by programmers?'