In the recent past, I have asked a few questions relating to language/standard library design -
The first two questions have been upvoted (+10 and +4 at the moment), whereas the last one has been "put on hold as primarily opinion-based".
From my perspective as the asker, they're all very similar questions -- I would like to know the official reasoning, if there exists some, behind existing design decisions. Some good history-based (i.e. not based on the opinions of merely the answerer) answers to such a question might look like -
I was on the committee when X was being decided and the committee decided to not do X because of Y and Z.
I am not on the committee but if you look at this link, it says that proposal X was rejected because of Y and Z, which applies to your question as well.
This point X has come up in informal discussions on the committee's mailing list/GitHub issue tracker (see link). However, because of Y and Z (see follow-ups in that link), there was never any enthusiasm to put X into the standard.
So I'm not sure why the third question was put on hold as primarily opinion-based, whereas the first and second were upvoted. How do I rephrase such questions better? Or should I avoid asking these kind of questions on Stack Overflow altogether?