Is there any consensus about how to deal with questions that ask about how to achieve a certain GUI layout?
I personally observe this in the swing and layout-manager tags, but can imagine that this similarly applies to similar GUI frameworks, even web-based ones, and probably even down to CSS:
A user wants to arrange a certain set of GUI components in a certain manner. The questions can be well-written, well-stated, maybe even including a MVCE or a nice mockup image of the desired outcome. And a well-stated question can receive a proper answer.
But there are infinitely many layouts, and many of the questions may be of very limited use for future readers. And of course, it is not possible to sensibly write a canonical answer for GUI layout questions.
Note that I don't see this as an immediate problem right now, and therefore, this is tagged as discussion: There will probably not be one acceptable answer. But maybe we can gather some opinions and criteria about how handle this sort of question - i.e. when to answer it, and when to close.
For example, one could argue about the specificity of the question: There are high-level "canonical" questions, e.g. about how to do a 3 column layout HTML/CSS. And there may be low-level, specific questions about how to make the bottom border of a cell in a Swing JTable
one pixel wider. Both can be equally justified. The first ones by their generic applicability. The other ones by their specificity, requiring "expert knowledge" (and where could you find this, if not on stack overflow?).
But I wonder about how to determine whether a "GUI layout question" is really worth being answered. For example: At which point would it be more appropriate to add one of the (nowadays somewhat discouraged) "RTFM" comments, pointing to the Visual Guide to Layout Managers (or a similar site for other UI frameworks), and then vote to close?
(Even if I wasn't sure which reason I could state for the vote...)
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