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Dec 7, 2018 at 12:28 comment added Ansgar Wiechers @Makoto Yes, there are better ways of phrasing that. But practically all of them involve context. Context that was deliberately removed from the example comments. I refuse to accept "why are you doing this?" as invalid criticism for questions where the OP is clearly trying to do something they shouldn't or when what they're doing doesn't seem to make any sense.
Dec 5, 2018 at 17:39 comment added Makoto If I ask a question explaining that I'm trying to foo the bar through baz and the first thing I hear is, "Why are you doing this?", I'm going to take that as a criticism, irrespective of what your intentions are. There's a better way to phrase a question like that. That's all I'm implying.
Dec 5, 2018 at 17:27 comment added John Bollinger I'm sorry, @Makoto, but I cannot agree that "Why do you want to do this?" is necessarily a criticism. On its face, it is simply a request for information, and such information is sometimes relevant to determining how best to answer the question. If we're going to start interpreting "Please provide the additional information I need to answer the question" requests as unwelcoming, then we're done.
Dec 5, 2018 at 17:20 comment added Makoto First point - with or without context, yes; "Why do you want to do this" is a criticism. It's a valid criticism in certain cases, but this is not about the criticism itself; it's about its cardinality and intent. Does one intend to be helpful if they submit "Why do you want to do this", or are you looking for a way to not answer their question? The intent of responding like this is key here. There's a difference between a question which is unanswerable and a question which one doesn't like.
Dec 5, 2018 at 16:20 history answered John Bollinger CC BY-SA 4.0