Timeline for What's the problem with this question?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
9 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jun 4, 2023 at 3:49 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | There are no useful or important details missing from that question, even in its original form, given that one has sufficient subject-matter expertise to know what they're talking about. | |
May 29, 2023 at 20:29 | comment | added | gnat | the problem looks more like lack of effort in supplying readers with useful details. The very question discussed here makes a good example: after asker added proper description of their issue it no longer looks like a recommendation, no matter if one has subject knowledge or not | |
May 29, 2023 at 9:13 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | Maybe the problem is lacking any familiarity with the subject matter. For example, not knowing how VBA works, not knowing what the References dialog that is mentioned in the question is, and therefore just triggering on key words in a short question. Well, I have a solution for that, too: don't vote to close questions where you lack any knowledge whatsoever and are unequipped to determine whether the question is suitable for Stack Overflow. "It smells/looks bad" is not a close-vote reason. You absolutely have to have a better argument than that. | |
May 29, 2023 at 9:11 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | "What is the difference between these two specific, similar-looking things in my development environment?" is not a recommendation question. That this point is lost on so many people active on Meta honestly makes me very concerned about the sustainability of the close voting system. The reason we don't allow recommendation questions is because they invite spam. It's the same reason we don't allow other open-ended questions that can have an infinite number of possible answers. This ain't that. Not even remotely close. | |
May 28, 2023 at 17:50 | comment | added | gnat | rev 3 opens with a brief vague sentence presenting a link to some post followed by "My references list includes Blah Library but it also includes Blah Blah Library Which one should I use? What's the difference?" This is all what's there, there's nothing else. You can use your mod powers to reopen such stuff how you like but to me, this changes nothing and question reads just a blatant library recommendation | |
May 27, 2023 at 14:35 | comment | added | Cody Gray Mod | Dangerously close to what? It's completely different from "Should I choose to learn Python or PHP?" I would be in favor of removing close-vote privileges from anyone who couldn't tell the difference between these two questions. It's not a recommendation question at all, in any interpretation of the term. (So the rules of a completely different site are irrelevant, just in case they weren't already.) The question is asking what the difference is between two specific things that are directly comparable. | |
May 27, 2023 at 14:33 | comment | added | Peter Mortensen | I haven't participated in any of the voting, but the last question makes it dangerously close: "When would I prefer to select one over the other?". Which is not that far from "Should I choose to learn Python or PHP?". Two libraries have been preselected instead of being open, but for being open, it wouldn't even have been accepted on Software Recommendations: "Good software recommendation requests have two components: a purpose (a task to accomplish, a user story) and some objective requirements (a minimum set of features)." | |
May 27, 2023 at 14:15 | history | edited | Cody GrayMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
added 392 characters in body
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May 27, 2023 at 14:08 | history | answered | Cody GrayMod | CC BY-SA 4.0 |