A couple of months ago, I started contributing to Stack Overflow, and since then I've been trying to understand issues such as "review" tasks. Although most issues seem pretty clear, others seem to live in some sort of limbo.
One example is the "too broad" definition:
There are either too many possible answers, or good answers would be too long for this format. Please add details to narrow the answer set or to isolate an issue that can be answered in a few paragraphs.
In theory, this is a good enough explanation for a number of questions:
- How to make a spreadsheet software?
- How to design an architecture for my game?
- How to juggle 3 oranges while peeling a banana? (I'm actually curious about this one so feel free to answer)
These are all examples that fit perfectly the definition and are typically put on hold as a result. But recently I've been seeing quite a few questions that do not seem to be "too broad" at all (although likely poorly asked). Such is the case for:
- How can I make a figure that has two x-axis?
- Interpolate Z values in a 3D surface, starting from an irregular set of points
These questions actually visually identify the problem and are generally specific about the expected outcome. In the first question, the user requests a plot with two axis that looks like the image it linked (from Excel) but made in Python, specifically with matplotlib. The second user wanted an alternative to scipy.interpolate.interp2d
(interpolation function in Python) that apparently was giving strange results for its case study (and he showed the pictures for it).
Arguably, we can consider those questions as being of poor quality (or at least expressed badly). But take that first example and compare it directly with this:
Visualization of wavelets coefficients for different deconstruction levels
How to plot multi-objectives pareto frontier with DEAP in Python
and let me give you one even more amazing:
It's a short sample from my own experience, but it feels like, by comparison, closing the first examples are a result of primarily opinion based.
I don't have enough reputation to vote to close yet, but I would guess that there might be some bias in the system.
When a user votes for close, do they know if other people close voted too? Can they see what categories the votes were cast in?
Is it likely that some questions might be being closed as "too broad" because they are actually of "too poor quality"? (...not sure if latter exists as a category in SO)
Are the questions I gave as examples not useful for SO? (personally I think they are useful; in the past I found some gems of answers in similar examples)
IMPORTANT NOTE: I'm not questioning the term "too broad", I'm questioning its criteria, particularly how it seems to be used (or interpreted) in SO.