NOTE: this question was briefly, wrongly, closed as duplicate of another. This question is about whether asking where to report a bug for a platform is on-topic. The duplicate was about whether a question that is asking whether some behaviour is a bug is on-topic.
A while ago I asked Where do you file bugs for Android/iOS Google Products or Services (AppInvites, Maps, etc…)? on Stack Overflow, and it was closed as off-topic: not about programming. I've read the help page and I think my question is on topic.
Specifically, my question is about Google Play Services, which falls into the "software tools commonly used by programmers" definition, and it was asking how to report a bug found in that library, which I think matches "a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development".
I personally consider bug reporting part of programming. It's not only a good practice, it's often necessary. Specially when the bug is causing you some big issue and you can't do much about it other then ask the library owner to fix it.
I can see this is borderline case. I would like to know what the community thinks about it.
Finally, if it is off-topic on Stack Overflow is there another Stack Exchange community where it would be on-topic? If so, is there a way to migrate my question there?
EDIT: Asking for a link is off topic in Stack Overflow. But is this the right way to judge it?
I mean, the link changed, project forked, weird stuff making it hard to track the "right" URL. Isn't that something more then just asking to act as a proxy for a google search?
I spent hours trying to figure out what's was going on before resulting to write on SO, finding out from other users that's wasn't actually an easy task nor someone had a solution.
It require that same thing you need when you have a problem with programming: someone with experience that followed the project closely. My point here is that probably we are using the wrong method to define what's off topic and what's not.
I think the way we should decide if something is in-topic or off-topic is "is it a straight forward reply? Only a google search away or does it require someone with experience to reply this question?".
Isn't this situation in itself enough to make of this an exception?
- not really, IMO. It's Google's problem to fix, not ours.