I previously asked this Meta question: Where is the right place to ask for advice about what is wrong with questions?Where is the right place to ask for advice about what is wrong with questions?
So now I'm asking for advice regarding some specific Stack Overflow questions - how can I improve them and get some answers?
I am pretty good at researching, debugging and figuring things out myself. IfIf I reach the point where I need ask a question on StackOverflowStack Overflow it means I have already exhausted every avenue I can think of and the question is by definition rather esoteric.
What additional infoinformation should I be adding to convey that I've already done a lot of research and investigations? ShouldShould I include a lot more references?
I tend to think if there's too much detail it will put people off, but maybe that's where I'm going wrong?
The specific questions I'm trying improve are:
###https://stackoverflow.com/q/50964595/46433###
- Should I clarify that I'm asking this question related to my development environment, therefore it's definitely programming related?
- There is widespread disagreement about whether questions like this belong on StackOverflowStack Overflow or ServerFaultServer Fault.
- For the purists, this is about installation of a tool which is used both in programming and non-programming, therefore it belongs on ServerFaultServer Fault.
- Pragmatists say that it belongs in the place it's more likely to get an answer. The consensus for this type of Docker question is that StackOverflowStack Overflow is likely to get more/better answers.
###Does the hash '#' in a Dockerfile comment need to be in column 1?
- This was auto-deleted. Is it worth trying to edit and resurrect it?
- I made it very clear in the question that I have done research and also tried it myself.
- The original down-voterdownvoter admitted in comments that it was a mistake, but SOStack Overflow doesn't allow reversal of downvotes.
- There has been some suggestion that the question is nothing more than trivia. It's a question about the correct syntax of a programming language, surely that's exactly why StackOverflowStack Overflow exists? ItIt definitely not just trivia.
- I train lots of developers, and I want to ensure the infoinformation I'm passing on is correct.
- I did request a clarification on the docsdocumentation, but I'm interested in whether people actually do use the hash in the way I'm querying.
- Should I put some example use cases in the question?
- The reason why I asked the question in the first place is due to the way VS CodeVisual Studio Code handles commenting of indented lines in Dockerfiles - it indents the hash symbols. II wondered whether it is doing it wrong and whether I need to not use that feature.
- VSVisual Studio Code is a VERY popular editor, and has strong support for editing Docker configsconfigurations. AA LOT of people are using it for this purpose.