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May 28, 2022 at 23:57 vote accept Bruce Adams
Apr 16, 2022 at 11:23 comment added Bruce Adams I have added an update to my meta question now I believe both questions have the same clear umabiguous answer. I also note that the example of a well received procfs question stackoverflow.com/questions/39066998/… - is exactly the sort which infuriates. It is a simple RTFM or google at best to find the answer.
Apr 15, 2022 at 22:16 comment added Tsyvarev @philipxy: How is this related to the question? I am perfectly aware what this 1 means.
Apr 15, 2022 at 22:13 comment added philipxy "ps(1)" See what the man page numbers in parentheses mean.
Apr 14, 2022 at 22:05 comment added Tsyvarev I agree that questions "should I use X or Y" are in risk to fall into category "there is no preference between X and Y, use any of them" and I see many such questions even in my favorite tags (e.g. "Which structure of files fits better for my CMake project"). But from my understanding, each such question should be examined separately, and for close a question as "opinion-based" one should be a domain expert at some extent. Are you sure that there is no guidance about using /proc/<pid>/stat file from e.g. Linux kernel developers, who actually "create" that file?
Apr 14, 2022 at 21:45 comment added Alexei Levenkov @Tsyvarev most of the time "should I use X or Y" are off-topic as opinion-based. In rare cases (like "Should I parameterize my SQL query or use string concatenation") there is a definitive answer, but it may not be obvious to asker which bucket the question falls into - I believe two linked questions are completely opinion-based as it does not look like there is a strong guidance there. It also very likely questions that can be answered with specific guidance will be downvoted as such guidance likely to be spelled out everywhere one of the options is mentioned.
Apr 14, 2022 at 19:59 comment added Tsyvarev @AlexeiLevenkov: Are questions about programming policies off-topic on Stack Overflow? There are "high-level" policies, which could be better asked on other sites (e.g. "Programmers"), but I saw many question on SO about "low-level" policies. E.g. a recent question about policies in the tag I follow: stackoverflow.com/questions/71855535/….
Apr 14, 2022 at 19:35 comment added EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine The mere fact that something was motivated by a programming task doesn't make it a programming question. Nearly all of my Super User questions were general computing problems that I encountered while programming, for example, and none of them are on-topic on this site.
Apr 14, 2022 at 18:36 comment added Alexei Levenkov I'd recommend to re-write "It asks about policies when one instrument should be preferred to another one in a program." - it reads as "but this question must be closed as opinion-based" while you are trying to argue that it is on-topic... Quite confusing.
Apr 14, 2022 at 13:21 comment added codewario It's often going to be how the problem is approached as to whether it's programmatic in nature. Troubleshooting problems with /proc not providing the correct information I would agree is off topic here. Questions about how to consume this as an API from scripts is and should be on topic for Stack Overflow. Asking about why there are two similar endpoints of an API would be on topic for any other language/environment. To be clear, these questions would fit under Super User and Unix/Linux, but they also fit here because they are programmatic in nature.
Apr 14, 2022 at 13:06 comment added nbk +1 we should be much more tolerant, about off topic and it is often difficult to determine if it is offtopic or not, in my point of view more in dubio pro reo less closure and deletion
Apr 14, 2022 at 11:46 comment added codewario It is really unfortunate the attitude this community has towards shell scripting sometimes. This is no more off topic than provider questions in PowerShell, because those could also be boiled down to "just paths" by the uninitiated. /proc is 100% an API most often used in systems programming, exposed as a "file system" in Unix because "everything is a file". It's just how some information is consumed, but these aren't files in the traditional sense of the word.
Apr 14, 2022 at 10:44 history answered Tsyvarev CC BY-SA 4.0