When I look at the list of exchanges on StackExchange, I see a number of exchanges related to computer software programming, such as Stack Overflow, Computer Graphics, Programming, and Web Applications. How do I determine which I should use for posting questions?
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Take a tour of the site (click "help" then "tour" in the header bar). It will tell you what the site is used for, what kinds of questions are accepted and point you to the "on-topic" section where you can read more.– Mike CluckCommented Jun 6, 2016 at 20:30
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5See also meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/275082/…, meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/314750/…, ...– jonrsharpeCommented Jun 6, 2016 at 20:43
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You even get a badge for reading the entire tour page :)– theblindprophetCommented Jun 6, 2016 at 20:48
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Note that Web Applications is not about programming web applications; it's for "power users of web applications". There may be questions within that are quite "programming-like"; for instance, cell formulae in Google Sheets, but it's generally geared toward end-users.– Heretic MonkeyCommented Jun 6, 2016 at 20:57
1 Answer
Read each site's on-topic guidelines (for example on-topic on SO) to find where you actually can ask the questions. Often a question will be on-topic for multiple communities or off-topic for all communities.
If your question is on-topic for multiple communities try to figure out which community perspective would be more helpful for an answer. For example, a debugging question about OpenGL could be posted on either Stack Overflow or Computer Graphics as long as it has a MCVE. Do not cross-post by asking the same exact question multiple places. If you still can't decide on the best home for a question, feel free to ask a site-recommendation on meta with your potential question.