There's no complexity requirement. Any command that can be typed into the shell might also be incorporated into a script, and therefore, it's a programming question. Furthermore, since the command prompt is the runtime by which these scripts are executed, even features dedicated to interactive use are allowable since the tool is a software tool commonly used by programmers for their programming tasks. This means we have significant overlap with Super User, Server Fault, and Unix and Linux. Askers can choose their audience, and that choice will probably result in a different emphasis on different aspects of the problems and their solutions. That's fine and not a problem.
Obviously, the normal rules about sufficient research and question quality still apply. So poorly researched questions with trivial answers can be downvoted, and others can be closed as Too Broad, Unclear, etc. if they aren't answerable.
Here are a couple more in depth discussions of the principle:
(Those are my answers, if you're wondering before you click.)
I'll also add specifically that crontab and systemd clearly fall under "tools commonly used by programmers," as it's often necessary to work with these tools to deploy a program and make it accomplish the task it was designed to do.
regex
questions are just asking about how to properly use a combination of the regex rules.ls | grep | sort
questions will get flogged hard at Unix & Linux.