I want to direct attention to this thread which got shut down for asking a question that was too broad. Please see the answer from Aidan at the bottom.
How can a 3D game render an object without having a sprite for every single angle?
The answer has 6 up-votes and was already provided 4 hours before the thread was closed as being too broad.
I have a lot of thoughts on this phenomena where a question that would normally seem bad because it's very general and not asking a very narrowly-defined problem gets shut down. This is a related thought: "Horrible Question" vs. "Perfect for SO Archives"
To me it's a tragedy to see a Q&A with that much potential get shut down, so I voted to reopen it.
Now Aidan's answer isn't perfect by any means. He glosses over the subjects, doesn't bother to explain the difference between scanline rasterization and raytracing (something I requested him to add), etc. But it's an answer with a lot of effort put into it, had potential to become even better (if the motivation wasn't lost due to the question being shut down), could have invited even better answers, and precisely the kind of answer other entry-level users who wondered about the same kind of thing might want.
If the site really cares about posterity, links like these to broad questions tend to hit a lot more people wanting to ask the same question than even the most meticulously-detailed troubleshooting question about some very specific piece of code, or worse, a homework question answered by the Fastest Gun in the West which points out a typo.
I really think we should think twice about what we consider "too broad". There are definitely some questions that are "too vague", but there's another category that can really produce some of the most generally-applicable answers (as in hitting the widest audience looking for already-answered questions) because the questions are very general.
Here's another one: How can I determine whether a 2D Point is within a Polygon?
Questions like these shouldn't be cast into the void if they end up resulting in a really great answer that could be of interest to many people in the future. In trying to enforce the rules so strongly, I think we forget the whole point of moderation -- to make sure the site leaves behind useful information to be found later. Shutting down these questions, and especially after they receive such a detailed answer that's being well-received, kind of defeats that whole purpose.
So I don't know, what do you guys think? Aren't these kinds of questions good for the site when they receive a detailed answer? Should we have a better distinction about what is "too broad"?
"efficient ray AABB intersection"
, not"How Can We Optimize This Ray/AABB Slab Implementation Using SSE 4?"
So I often think the qualities that make a question "great" (in the sense I'm describing it, not by SO's current metrics) require a fairly broad question lacking many details. In any case, apologies for using up your time!