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Second iteration [<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/nontrivial#Adjective>]. Some references changes.
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Peter Mortensen
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  • 14

Suppose you have this question:

Which is better: X or Y?

or

What is the best way to do Z?

You could close it using the "opinion-based" close-reason. However, this is not very helpful for a person who wants to choose how to do some task.

You could answer it as follows:

To decide what is better, you have to consider A, B and C.

The question may still be considered opinion-based, because ultimately your decision depends on your opinion on A, B and C. However, "A, B and C" is a vital piece of information, and attaching it to the question makes the world better.

To make it more general, you can close any question for any reason, but sometimes it's not clear how this reason applies. This (how a particular reason applies to the question) may be something obvious for experts but completely unclear to OP. This site was built specifically for accumulating such information, using answers (or, maybe more recently, comments).

Usually such information can fit in comments (e.g. "needs debugging details"), but sometimes not. Another close-reason for which a lengthy explanation may be required is "duplicate". Maybe for others too (see below).

What should we do?


I searched for closed questions on (because that's what I mostly care about); here are some examples where a more "explicit" treatment would have been better. I picked newest ones. I had to search through quite a lot to find ones which were closed, but whose close reason required non-trivialnontrivial explanation.

  1. Are Unitunit tests necessary for Embeddedembedded C/C++ projects?
  2. what'sWhat's the difference between threading libraries like pthreads and std::thread?
  3. Storing a song genres in just one byte
  4. Boolean testing vs exception in stringstream
  5. What is the algorithm for installing a library in c++C++?

Here are some old questions which accumulated answers but were later closed. I picked most voted-for ones. Here, whether or not they are closed is not very important, but it still illustrates a point that close-worthy questions may also be answerable.

  1. Calling C/C++ from Python?
  2. Why have header files and .cpp files?
  3. Case-insensitive string comparison in C++
  4. Do you (really) write exception safe code?
  5. C/C++ include header file order

Suppose you have this question:

Which is better: X or Y?

or

What is the best way to do Z?

You could close it using the "opinion-based" close-reason. However, this is not very helpful for a person who wants to choose how to do some task.

You could answer it as follows:

To decide what is better, you have to consider A, B and C.

The question may still be considered opinion-based, because ultimately your decision depends on your opinion on A, B and C. However, "A, B and C" is a vital piece of information, and attaching it to the question makes the world better.

To make it more general, you can close any question for any reason, but sometimes it's not clear how this reason applies. This (how a particular reason applies to the question) may be something obvious for experts but completely unclear to OP. This site was built specifically for accumulating such information, using answers (or, maybe more recently, comments).

Usually such information can fit in comments (e.g. "needs debugging details"), but sometimes not. Another close-reason for which a lengthy explanation may be required is "duplicate". Maybe for others too (see below).

What should we do?


I searched for closed questions on (because that's what I mostly care about); here are some examples where a more "explicit" treatment would have been better. I picked newest ones. I had to search through quite a lot to find ones which were closed, but whose close reason required non-trivial explanation.

  1. Are Unit tests necessary for Embedded C/C++ projects?
  2. what's the difference between threading libraries like pthreads and std::thread?
  3. Storing a song genres in just one byte
  4. Boolean testing vs exception in stringstream
  5. What is the algorithm for installing a library in c++?

Here are some old questions which accumulated answers but were later closed. I picked most voted-for ones. Here, whether or not they are closed is not very important, but it still illustrates a point that close-worthy questions may also be answerable.

  1. Calling C/C++ from Python?
  2. Why have header files and .cpp files?
  3. Case-insensitive string comparison in C++
  4. Do you (really) write exception safe code?
  5. C/C++ include header file order

Suppose you have this question:

Which is better: X or Y?

or

What is the best way to do Z?

You could close it using the "opinion-based" close-reason. However, this is not very helpful for a person who wants to choose how to do some task.

You could answer it as follows:

To decide what is better, you have to consider A, B and C.

The question may still be considered opinion-based, because ultimately your decision depends on your opinion on A, B and C. However, "A, B and C" is a vital piece of information, and attaching it to the question makes the world better.

To make it more general, you can close any question for any reason, but sometimes it's not clear how this reason applies. This (how a particular reason applies to the question) may be something obvious for experts but completely unclear to OP. This site was built specifically for accumulating such information, using answers (or, maybe more recently, comments).

Usually such information can fit in comments (e.g. "needs debugging details"), but sometimes not. Another close-reason for which a lengthy explanation may be required is "duplicate". Maybe for others too (see below).

What should we do?


I searched for closed questions on (because that's what I mostly care about); here are some examples where a more "explicit" treatment would have been better. I picked newest ones. I had to search through quite a lot to find ones which were closed, but whose close reason required nontrivial explanation.

  1. Are unit tests necessary for embedded C/C++ projects?
  2. What's the difference between threading libraries like pthreads and std::thread?
  3. Storing a song genres in just one byte
  4. Boolean testing vs exception in stringstream
  5. What is the algorithm for installing a library in C++?

Here are some old questions which accumulated answers but were later closed. I picked most voted-for ones. Here, whether or not they are closed is not very important, but it still illustrates a point that close-worthy questions may also be answerable.

  1. Calling C/C++ from Python?
  2. Why have header files and .cpp files?
  3. Case-insensitive string comparison in C++
  4. Do you (really) write exception safe code?
  5. C/C++ include header file order
Eliminated the sentence fragment. Fixed the question formation - missing auxiliary (or helping) verb - see e.g. <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t4yWEt0OSpg&t=1m49s> (see also <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kS5NfSzXfrI> (QUASM)) - alternatively, drop the question mark.
Source Link
Peter Mortensen
  • 31.6k
  • 4
  • 22
  • 14

What tocan we do when a close-reason requires an explanation?

Suppose you have this question:

Which is better: X or Y?

or

What is the best way to do Z?

You could close it using the "opinion-based" close-reason. However, this is not very helpful for a person who wants to choose how to do some task.

You could answer it as follows:

To decide what is better, you have to consider A, B and C.

The question may still be considered opinion-based, because ultimately your decision depends on your opinion on A, B and C. However, "A, B and C" is a vital piece of information, and attaching it to the question makes the world better.

To make it more general, you can close any question for any reason, but sometimes it's not clear how this reason applies. This (how a particular reason applies to the question) may be something obvious for experts but completely unclear to OP. This site was built specifically for accumulating such information, using answers (or, maybe more recently, comments).

Usually such information can fit in comments (e.g. "needs debugging details"), but sometimes not. Another close-reason for which a lengthy explanation may be required is "duplicate". Maybe for others too (see below).

What should we do?


I searched for closed questions on (because that's what I mostly care about); here are some examples where a more "explicit" treatment would have been better. I picked newest ones. HadI had to search through quite a lot to find ones which were closed, but whose close reason required non-trivial explanation.

  1. Are Unit tests necessary for Embedded C/C++ projects?
  2. what's the difference between threading libraries like pthreads and std::thread?
  3. Storing a song genres in just one byte
  4. Boolean testing vs exception in stringstream
  5. What is the algorithm for installing a library in c++?

Here are some old questions which accumulated answers but were later closed. I picked most voted-for ones. Here, whether or not they are closed is not very important, but it still illustrates a point that close-worthy questions may also be answerable.

  1. Calling C/C++ from Python?
  2. Why have header files and .cpp files?
  3. Case-insensitive string comparison in C++
  4. Do you (really) write exception safe code?
  5. C/C++ include header file order

What to do when a close-reason requires an explanation?

Suppose you have this question:

Which is better: X or Y?

or

What is the best way to do Z?

You could close it using the "opinion-based" close-reason. However, this is not very helpful for a person who wants to choose how to do some task.

You could answer it as follows:

To decide what is better, you have to consider A, B and C.

The question may still be considered opinion-based, because ultimately your decision depends on your opinion on A, B and C. However, "A, B and C" is a vital piece of information, and attaching it to the question makes the world better.

To make it more general, you can close any question for any reason, but sometimes it's not clear how this reason applies. This (how a particular reason applies to the question) may be something obvious for experts but completely unclear to OP. This site was built specifically for accumulating such information, using answers (or, maybe more recently, comments).

Usually such information can fit in comments (e.g. "needs debugging details"), but sometimes not. Another close-reason for which a lengthy explanation may be required is "duplicate". Maybe for others too (see below).

What should we do?


I searched for closed questions on (because that's what I mostly care about); here are some examples where a more "explicit" treatment would have been better. I picked newest ones. Had to search through quite a lot to find ones which were closed, but close reason required non-trivial explanation.

  1. Are Unit tests necessary for Embedded C/C++ projects?
  2. what's the difference between threading libraries like pthreads and std::thread?
  3. Storing a song genres in just one byte
  4. Boolean testing vs exception in stringstream
  5. What is the algorithm for installing a library in c++?

Here are some old questions which accumulated answers but were later closed. I picked most voted-for ones. Here, whether or not they are closed is not very important, but it still illustrates a point that close-worthy questions may also be answerable.

  1. Calling C/C++ from Python?
  2. Why have header files and .cpp files?
  3. Case-insensitive string comparison in C++
  4. Do you (really) write exception safe code?
  5. C/C++ include header file order

What can we do when a close-reason requires an explanation?

Suppose you have this question:

Which is better: X or Y?

or

What is the best way to do Z?

You could close it using the "opinion-based" close-reason. However, this is not very helpful for a person who wants to choose how to do some task.

You could answer it as follows:

To decide what is better, you have to consider A, B and C.

The question may still be considered opinion-based, because ultimately your decision depends on your opinion on A, B and C. However, "A, B and C" is a vital piece of information, and attaching it to the question makes the world better.

To make it more general, you can close any question for any reason, but sometimes it's not clear how this reason applies. This (how a particular reason applies to the question) may be something obvious for experts but completely unclear to OP. This site was built specifically for accumulating such information, using answers (or, maybe more recently, comments).

Usually such information can fit in comments (e.g. "needs debugging details"), but sometimes not. Another close-reason for which a lengthy explanation may be required is "duplicate". Maybe for others too (see below).

What should we do?


I searched for closed questions on (because that's what I mostly care about); here are some examples where a more "explicit" treatment would have been better. I picked newest ones. I had to search through quite a lot to find ones which were closed, but whose close reason required non-trivial explanation.

  1. Are Unit tests necessary for Embedded C/C++ projects?
  2. what's the difference between threading libraries like pthreads and std::thread?
  3. Storing a song genres in just one byte
  4. Boolean testing vs exception in stringstream
  5. What is the algorithm for installing a library in c++?

Here are some old questions which accumulated answers but were later closed. I picked most voted-for ones. Here, whether or not they are closed is not very important, but it still illustrates a point that close-worthy questions may also be answerable.

  1. Calling C/C++ from Python?
  2. Why have header files and .cpp files?
  3. Case-insensitive string comparison in C++
  4. Do you (really) write exception safe code?
  5. C/C++ include header file order
Source Link
anatolyg
  • 28.3k
  • 1
  • 32
  • 40

What to do when a close-reason requires an explanation?

Suppose you have this question:

Which is better: X or Y?

or

What is the best way to do Z?

You could close it using the "opinion-based" close-reason. However, this is not very helpful for a person who wants to choose how to do some task.

You could answer it as follows:

To decide what is better, you have to consider A, B and C.

The question may still be considered opinion-based, because ultimately your decision depends on your opinion on A, B and C. However, "A, B and C" is a vital piece of information, and attaching it to the question makes the world better.

To make it more general, you can close any question for any reason, but sometimes it's not clear how this reason applies. This (how a particular reason applies to the question) may be something obvious for experts but completely unclear to OP. This site was built specifically for accumulating such information, using answers (or, maybe more recently, comments).

Usually such information can fit in comments (e.g. "needs debugging details"), but sometimes not. Another close-reason for which a lengthy explanation may be required is "duplicate". Maybe for others too (see below).

What should we do?


I searched for closed questions on (because that's what I mostly care about); here are some examples where a more "explicit" treatment would have been better. I picked newest ones. Had to search through quite a lot to find ones which were closed, but close reason required non-trivial explanation.

  1. Are Unit tests necessary for Embedded C/C++ projects?
  2. what's the difference between threading libraries like pthreads and std::thread?
  3. Storing a song genres in just one byte
  4. Boolean testing vs exception in stringstream
  5. What is the algorithm for installing a library in c++?

Here are some old questions which accumulated answers but were later closed. I picked most voted-for ones. Here, whether or not they are closed is not very important, but it still illustrates a point that close-worthy questions may also be answerable.

  1. Calling C/C++ from Python?
  2. Why have header files and .cpp files?
  3. Case-insensitive string comparison in C++
  4. Do you (really) write exception safe code?
  5. C/C++ include header file order