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replaced http://codereview.stackexchange.com/ with https://codereview.stackexchange.com/
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That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help centerhelp center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

replaced http://programmers.stackexchange.com/ with https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help centerhelp center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

replaced http://meta.programmers.stackexchange.com/ with https://softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”?What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack OverflowWhat goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

That post, in its current form, can be closed for the following reasons.

  1. Too broad
  • Any answers to the question will be extremely long, your question should be able to be answered with a few paragraphs or less.
  • If your question could take up an entire chapter in a programming book, it is probably too broad for Stack Overflow.
  1. Primarily Opinion Based
  • Questions that don't have a concrete answer are generally going to be based on opinions and not facts.
  1. Unclear What You're Asking
  • It is unclear exactly what your question is asking, which adds to the Too Broad close reason.
  1. No MCVE
  • Generally, questions on Stack Overflow should be about a specific programming problem, so you should include some code demonstrating the specific programming problem.
  • There are some exceptions to this rule but, as far as I can tell, your question is not one of those exceptions.

I don't think that there is actually any way of salvaging that question without completely changing the question. If you asked about a specific problem relating to the concept that you're asking about, possibly. But, if you're asking about the upsides and downsides of a certain method, it will probably be closed for the same reasons above.

In its current form, your question is off-topic for programmers.stackexchange.com, see Discuss this ${blog}, What is the problem with “Pros and Cons”? and What goes on Programmers.SE? A guide for Stack Overflow. However, you may have an easier time editing it to be on-topic there. Keep in mind that their rules about what can or cannot be asked are more strict than Stack Overflow's rules. If that is what you end up doing, I want to stress that you read the information available in their help center about how to ask questions, what topics can be discussed and what topics cannot.

Also, if you have working code and you would like others to review it to suggest possible down-sides there is also codereview.stackexchange.com, but their rules are just as strict as prog.se so make sure you read the relevant help center information there as well before posting your question

However, there might be no amount of editing that can make your question on-topic on any Stack Exchange site. In which case, there is simply nothing you can do about it.

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