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replaced http://android.stackexchange.com/ with https://android.stackexchange.com/
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Right...where to start...

First, Android Enthusiasts is about...enthusiasts. You can be a programmer and an enthusiast, but if you have a programming question, the standing advice is to ask it on Stack Overflow.the standing advice is to ask it on Stack Overflow.

Next, there are about ~679K questions in . This compares to the ~866K questions in or the ~802K questions in . Even though I can be sure that there's some overlap with Java and Android, the fact of the matter is that there's comparably not a lot of questions in Android.

To put it in better perspective: there are ~9530K (or ~9.5M if you prefer) questions on Stack Overflow. Android only takes up 7% of all questions on the site.

So no, I don't think that breaking that up would be a good idea. I don't think it's too big. I doubt it makes sense to especially when there are established experts here who are willing to answer the questions. Further to that, perhaps the question isn't scoped to just Android - maybe it's Java related in nature? Why exclude that subset of experts because they don't program Android?

Right...where to start...

First, Android Enthusiasts is about...enthusiasts. You can be a programmer and an enthusiast, but if you have a programming question, the standing advice is to ask it on Stack Overflow.

Next, there are about ~679K questions in . This compares to the ~866K questions in or the ~802K questions in . Even though I can be sure that there's some overlap with Java and Android, the fact of the matter is that there's comparably not a lot of questions in Android.

To put it in better perspective: there are ~9530K (or ~9.5M if you prefer) questions on Stack Overflow. Android only takes up 7% of all questions on the site.

So no, I don't think that breaking that up would be a good idea. I don't think it's too big. I doubt it makes sense to especially when there are established experts here who are willing to answer the questions. Further to that, perhaps the question isn't scoped to just Android - maybe it's Java related in nature? Why exclude that subset of experts because they don't program Android?

Right...where to start...

First, Android Enthusiasts is about...enthusiasts. You can be a programmer and an enthusiast, but if you have a programming question, the standing advice is to ask it on Stack Overflow.

Next, there are about ~679K questions in . This compares to the ~866K questions in or the ~802K questions in . Even though I can be sure that there's some overlap with Java and Android, the fact of the matter is that there's comparably not a lot of questions in Android.

To put it in better perspective: there are ~9530K (or ~9.5M if you prefer) questions on Stack Overflow. Android only takes up 7% of all questions on the site.

So no, I don't think that breaking that up would be a good idea. I don't think it's too big. I doubt it makes sense to especially when there are established experts here who are willing to answer the questions. Further to that, perhaps the question isn't scoped to just Android - maybe it's Java related in nature? Why exclude that subset of experts because they don't program Android?

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Makoto
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Right...where to start...

First, Android Enthusiasts is about...enthusiasts. You can be a programmer and an enthusiast, but if you have a programming question, the standing advice is to ask it on Stack Overflow.

Next, there are about ~679K questions in . This compares to the ~866K questions in or the ~802K questions in . Even though I can be sure that there's some overlap with Java and Android, the fact of the matter is that there's comparably not a lot of questions in Android.

To put it in better perspective: there are ~9530K (or ~9.5M if you prefer) questions on Stack Overflow. Android only takes up 7% of all questions on the site.

So no, I don't think that breaking that up would be a good idea. I don't think it's too big. I doubt it makes sense to especially when there are established experts here who are willing to answer the questions. Further to that, perhaps the question isn't scoped to just Android - maybe it's Java related in nature? Why exclude that subset of experts because they don't program Android?