Would this question have been appropriate if the inverse question had been asked?
"How can I improve core i7 pipeline performance with this code?"
Is this "obviously" too broad? Microarchitecture optimisations surely are an appropriate topic for Stack Overflow so the topic should not be discounted out of hand. There may be a set of specific techniques used to optimise a given program for a given architecture. Just because there exists more than one or two techniques does not automatically make something too broad.
An unbounded set of answers or techniques certainly is too broad though. So how many correct answers N
is too many?
Not too broad < N < Too Broad
What is N
? Does N
change given the topic? I feel this is the major sticking point here - what is "too broad"? I don't think this particular question meets that definition. The answers are focused, immediately relevant, useful to future visitors, and are not contradictory (answer 1 can be used alongside answer 2).
Example of a question that is too broad:
- When should I use a linked list?
Examples of a question that's probably not too broad:
- Which sorting algorithm should I use for .. purpose? (May have several equally correct answers with tradeoffs, but probably no more than 3 or 4 depending on the specific question)
The popularity of a question or answer shouldn't have anything to do with whether or not a question/answer is on topic. The usefulness of a question and answer do. "Too broad" is subjective in some cases, so calling this question "obviously" broad is wrong IMO.
If the argument here is that the quality of the question is bad but the content is obviously useful, then err on the side of not closing, and either improve the question or encourage others to improve the question. Default closing should be reserved for truly awful questions with no redeeming qualities or very clearly off topic question.
Moderators should default to leaving a question open if there is significant disagreement. I think locking the question in this case was right to stop the ping ponging, but I would have preferred it to be locked in an open state (if that's possible) considering the topic wasn't being abused by drive by answerers.
Locking/closing questions sends certain signals, of which many in this community and others interpret as being negative. Questions in a grey area that are locked send very negative signals to participants in a question as well as external communities that may be following along. By all means lock/close anything not in a grey area (discussions for example), but err on the side of caution for those that are.