With the current vibe that questions quality is rapidly decreasing and closing needs to be faster and easier, one crucial component is being overlooked.
The problem with "Primarily Opinion Based"
I like Primarily Opinion Based. Unfortunately, there are a lot of ways that the phrasing encourages it to get misused. Here are some from a quick run of the close votes queue.
- "Primarily Opinion Based" despite having objective answers
- "Primarily Opinion Based" for daring to ask about what something is
- Because... I really don't know
Further, there are useful questions with objective answers which are disallowed by this close reason, such as "When should I separately implement IEnumerator<T>?"
The solution
By rephrasing the title, we could make it clear that the close reason doesn't apply to questions that just involve opinion, but questions looking for opinion.
If we close all questions that involve opinion, we pretty much close all questions with multiple answers. The problems come when we have questions where there is no matter of expertise. Where there is no right answer.
This is not what is getting across to reviewers. If you don't believe me, go through the "Primarily Opinion Based" filter for a short time. It's disturbing how eager people are to close good, helpful and high-quality questions.
If this is somehow worthy of staying open, there's no reason for this to have four close votes as if it were asking about a matter of opinion on it.