I frequent the functional programming tag and often see questions like this one where the OP is asking how to do something something functional programming (or how to do something using a functional library something something functional programming).
The problem is that while you can convert the code to use functional calls/expressions/composition instead of a more imperative style frequently the code already works and/or changing it to a more functional style arguably makes it worse (less readable/maintainable, vendor-locked on specific libraries, etc. for little or no benefit).
I mean, I'm as in to functional programming as the next person (I frequent the tag for a reason) and think it's a great step forward in general for correctness, code reuse through composition, etc. But too often these requests seem buzzword-bingo/cargo-cult incantation kinds of things.
I realize this is not necessarily unique to functional programming (I'm sure if Stack Overflow had been around in it's current incarnation in 1997 it would have been "how do I do something something object-oriented?") but since it's the current "in thing" in some circles it seems to be drawing more than its fair share of such questions.
Generally if the question is a solid question by the site's rules I'll try to answer it with a caveat not to put the cart before the horse (make it functional for the sake of checking off the buzzword list). If the question is objectively awful for another reason I'll deal with it for that (e.g. no MCVE). But the reason I'm asking this question is I see a lot of these as being in a grey area. Consider the question I linked. You could treat it as
- Belonging on Code Review instead of here
- Too broad
- Opinion-based
None of those are necessarily wrong, but none of them are a perfect fit either and I have both used and seen others use a mix in practice. You could also just say "meh it's not great but good enough" and answer it.
So should I vote to close? If so for what reason? Can I apply that reason in principled fashion to such questions or is it case-by-case? Let it slide? Let it slide but leave a comment? Is there a stock comment that is used for stuff like this (the way there is for MVCE for example)?
If the answer is that there is no answer that's fine, I'll keep doing what I've been doing, but I see this often enough I wanted to ask.
if/else
because... reasons? I mean, JavaScript has a ternary operator. Again, I chose this because I consider it an edge case. If it were just a text dump with "how do I make this more functional" I'd VTC no question (tag gets plenty of those). If it were "how do I get this compositional pipeline correct? It outputs y for input x and I want z" I'd answer it.