In particular, I am referring to this recent question that ended up deleted by its owner, and my attempt to save it, because I think it was a legitimate question.
The underlying issue described in the question is that its original author did not understand the difference between passing x
in
new int[x]
and
new List<int>(x)
As a symptom of that lack of understanding, an IndexOutOfRangeException
was observed.
The original question was closed by Selman22 and my revival of the question was closed by Henk Holtermann. Both close votes were single votes (i.e. without any confirming votes of other users), and both votes were duplicate votes pointing to What is IndexOutOfRangeException and how do I fix it?.
The linked question and its community wiki answer focuses on what an IndexOutOfRangeException
is. It briefly touches upon the List<T>
class, but does not even mention that List<T>
has a constructor that accepts an initial capacity.
In a comment, Henk suggests that
Answers about this should be concentrated under the canonical question.
However, to me, it is absolutely not clear what "this" is. The two closed questions are not about IndexOutOfRangeException
as such. They could just as well have been about Length
vs. Count
, dealing with the same underlying problem of misunderstanding the difference between the list's capacity argument and the array's size-based initialization.
As such, by editing the respective information into the (already quite lengthy) community wiki answer, we transform the so-called canonical question into What is IndexOutOfRangeException and how do I fix it? And what are all the different cases in which it might appear?
Without any doubt, such a question would be closed as too broad, if asked directly like that.
Is it really desirable to grow canonical answers into all directions rather than staying focused, in a way that such canonical answers eventually rival a comprehensive manual like MSDN?
Or, differently put:
Should canonical answers still focus on particular questions, or should they amass any kinds of vaguely related information to the topic at hand, with the expectation that any slightly related future questions are duplicates because their answers can be somehow deduced from the canonical answer?