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Apr 3 at 15:04 comment added NotTheDr01ds @JaredSmith I do agree with that, and I feel that I usually do try to "squint" to see the programming side of questions whenever possible. In this case it was just a lack of familiarity with the tool more than anything. Keep in mind that the question had just received a NATO that wasn't great (now deleted, probably due to the Meta-effect), so that's always a good reason to at least consider whether a question is on-topic and likely to receive good answers in the future. In this case, I (and two other voters) made the wrong call.
Apr 3 at 14:03 comment added Jared Smith One thing you may want to consider is the advisability of giving the benefit of the doubt if it's an edge case. We should be looking for reasons to keep questions open, not close them. There are plenty of questions asked every second of every day that are unsalvageable with any reasonable amount of effort, and if we're going to expend energy to close questions there are plenty of those to use it on.
Apr 3 at 12:34 comment added NotTheDr01ds Thanks for the feedback everyone - I'm convinced!
Apr 3 at 10:14 history became hot meta post
Apr 3 at 9:27 vote accept NotTheDr01ds
Apr 3 at 9:24 vote accept NotTheDr01ds
Apr 3 at 9:26
Apr 3 at 9:12 comment added Gimby Ask two people and you'll probably get a yes and a no. It all depends on how you interpret the badly written rules surrounding this subject. Some people take it seriously that a question must be a programming problem (because the help center says so, quite poorly). Some people don't (because the close reason is written in a way that allows you to interpret it any way you want). Apparently you take even another approach and don't consider this is a programming tool. I respect your opinion, but since Stack Overflow allows SQL questions... it kind of comes with the territory.
Apr 3 at 8:16 comment added Thom A For transparency, I have updated the excerpt to reflect what I feel I and other SMEs are likely to think [ssms] should be used for. This removes the caveat for it being about programming, and denotes that the tag shouldn't be used to ask about T-SQL/SQL Server (as tagging [ssms] for your data engine is like tagging [visual-studio] for your programming language).
Apr 3 at 8:10 comment added Thom A "Use this tag for questions about SSMS features that are relevant for programming" Eh, I'm not sure I really agree with that. Other IDE (like) applications allow for non-programming related questions, as IDEs are tools that programmers use frequently, so I don't see why SSMS should be any different. I would likely answer that question, and certainly wouldn't VTC it (apart from to dupe hammer), and I doubt the other users who are active in SQL Server related tags would VTC it either. I'm minded to change that excerpt
Apr 3 at 8:07 answer added rene timeline score: 45
Apr 3 at 6:28 comment added starball I say it's perfectly legit. (though, coming from the mouth of one who mains the VS Code tag, take my words here with a grain of salt. though it's nice to see others agree with me)
Apr 3 at 3:55 answer added CPlus timeline score: 12
Apr 2 at 23:42 comment added NotTheDr01ds @HereticMonkey Funny you should say "if you squint" as I almost used the same wording my question ;-)
Apr 2 at 23:25 comment added Robert Harvey For what it's worth, T-SQL is Turing-complete; but even if it wasn't, for validation, verification and certification purposes, I consider it to be as valid, critical and essential as any other code. In other words, SQL programming is real programming, and SSMS is a real programming editor.
Apr 2 at 22:41 comment added Heretic Monkey It is as on-topic as a question about an IDE for, say, CSS is. CSS is used by designers to chose colors and font attributes and layout and a number of other things the developers may or may not do on a frequent basis. Is it "relevant for programming"? Sure, if you squint. Personally, I think a question about word-wrapping in any IDE should be off-topic, but luckily I don't make the rules.
Apr 2 at 22:28 history asked NotTheDr01ds CC BY-SA 4.0