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(While we are at it - the answer was edited.) [<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/off-topic#Adjective> <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/on-topic#Adjective> <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/troubleshoot#Verb> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_clause_structure#Run-on_sentences>].
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Peter Mortensen
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Use common sense. You'll have to read it as "software tools commonly used when programming". If programmers are likely to play computer games, that doesn't mean that questions about computer games are on-topic.

Web browsers are kind of a grey area though, and again we have to use common sense. If the question is "I'm having problem surfing the web with Firefox" then the question is definitely off topic-topic. If the question is "I'm doing web development and my page looks strange in Firefox" then the question is on topic-topic. Not because Firefox is a programming tool, but because it is a target platform.

If you apply common sense to the particular question linked, it can be boiled down to "I'm having problems with a certain application since I upgraded Firefox" and should be closed.

It could have been on topic-topic if the poster had written something like "I'm having problems with my application since I upgraded Firefox. This is what my application does: ... It uses the following resources which I think could be the cause: ... Here is the research of what I have done to trouble-shoottroubleshoot the issue: ..."

Use common sense. You'll have to read it as "software tools commonly used when programming". If programmers are likely to play computer games, that doesn't mean that questions about computer games are on-topic.

Web browsers are kind of a grey area though, again we have to use common sense. If the question is "I'm having problem surfing the web with Firefox" then the question is definitely off topic. If the question is "I'm doing web development and my page looks strange in Firefox" then the question is on topic. Not because Firefox is a programming tool, but because it is a target platform.

If you apply common sense to the particular question linked, it can be boiled down to "I'm having problems with a certain application since I upgraded Firefox" and should be closed.

It could have been on topic if the poster had written something like "I'm having problems with my application since I upgraded Firefox. This is what my application does: ... It uses the following resources which I think could be the cause: ... Here is the research of what I have done to trouble-shoot the issue: ..."

Use common sense. You'll have to read it as "software tools commonly used when programming". If programmers are likely to play computer games, that doesn't mean that questions about computer games are on-topic.

Web browsers are kind of a grey area though, and again we have to use common sense. If the question is "I'm having problem surfing the web with Firefox" then the question is definitely off-topic. If the question is "I'm doing web development and my page looks strange in Firefox" then the question is on-topic. Not because Firefox is a programming tool, but because it is a target platform.

If you apply common sense to the particular question linked, it can be boiled down to "I'm having problems with a certain application since I upgraded Firefox" and should be closed.

It could have been on-topic if the poster had written something like "I'm having problems with my application since I upgraded Firefox. This is what my application does: ... It uses the following resources which I think could be the cause: ... Here is the research of what I have done to troubleshoot the issue: ..."

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Wicket
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Use common sense. You'll have to read it as "software tools commonly used when programming". If programmers are likely to play computer games, that doesn't mean that questions about computer games are on-topic.

Web browsersWeb browsers are kind of a grey area though, again we have to use common sense. If the question is "I'm having problem surfing the web with Firefox" then the question is definitely off topic. If the question is "I'm doing web development and my page looks strange in Firefox" then the question is on topic. Not because Firefox is a programming tool, but because it is a target platformit is a target platform.

If you apply common sense to the particular question linked, it can be boiled down to "I'm having problems with a certain application since I upgraded Firefox" and should be closed.

It could have been on topic if the poster had written something like "I'm having problems with my application since I upgraded Firefox. This is what my application does: ... It uses the following resources which I think could be the cause: ... Here is the research of what I have done to trouble-shoot the issue: ..."

Use common sense. You'll have to read it as "software tools commonly used when programming". If programmers are likely to play computer games, that doesn't mean that questions about computer games are on-topic.

Web browsers are kind of a grey area though, again we have to use common sense. If the question is "I'm having problem surfing the web with Firefox" then the question is definitely off topic. If the question is "I'm doing web development and my page looks strange in Firefox" then the question is on topic. Not because Firefox is a programming tool, but because it is a target platform.

If you apply common sense to the particular question linked, it can be boiled down to "I'm having problems with a certain application since I upgraded Firefox" and should be closed.

It could have been on topic if the poster had written something like "I'm having problems with my application since I upgraded Firefox. This is what my application does: ... It uses the following resources which I think could be the cause: ... Here is the research of what I have done to trouble-shoot the issue: ..."

Use common sense. You'll have to read it as "software tools commonly used when programming". If programmers are likely to play computer games, that doesn't mean that questions about computer games are on-topic.

Web browsers are kind of a grey area though, again we have to use common sense. If the question is "I'm having problem surfing the web with Firefox" then the question is definitely off topic. If the question is "I'm doing web development and my page looks strange in Firefox" then the question is on topic. Not because Firefox is a programming tool, but because it is a target platform.

If you apply common sense to the particular question linked, it can be boiled down to "I'm having problems with a certain application since I upgraded Firefox" and should be closed.

It could have been on topic if the poster had written something like "I'm having problems with my application since I upgraded Firefox. This is what my application does: ... It uses the following resources which I think could be the cause: ... Here is the research of what I have done to trouble-shoot the issue: ..."

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Lundin
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Use common sense. You'll have to read it as "software tools commonly used when programming". If programmers are likely to play computer games, that doesn't mean that questions about computer games are on-topic.

Web browsers are kind of a grey area though, again we have to use common sense. If the question is "I'm having problem surfing the web with Firefox" then the question is definitely off topic. If the question is "I'm doing web development and my page looks strange in Firefox" then the question is on topic. Not because Firefox is a programming tool, but because it is a target platform.

If you apply common sense to the particular question linked, it can be boiled down to "I'm having problems with a certain application since I upgraded Firefox" and should be closed.

It could have been on topic if the poster had written something like "I'm having problems with my application since I upgraded Firefox. This is what my application does: ... It uses the following resources which I think could be the cause: ... Here is the research of what I have done to trouble-shoot the issue: ..."