I (under the name v1nce) posted the following question Where can I find "books" in Apple News Format? which is on hold now because I asked for a recommendation and this is supposed to be prone to opinionated answers (or spam).
Yes, it is. But does this not fulfil a real need?
I'm unhappy with (but I respect) the rule of "no recommendation" for "old" tech, I'd rather find recommendations in Stack Overflow but I'm fine with asking Google because I'll find tutorials/introduction/samples easily When the tech is mature.
This is another matter with a new language (vala), file format (ANF), codec (av1) which don't have reached yet the critical mass to attract lots of devs and for which there's little or no documentation except for a reference site. This reference site is not always sufficient for edge cases, big files/bitrates. Alternative examples could exist but be hard to find using Google.
I think asking for a recommendation should be:
- Not OK when you're new to the subject (and too lazy to Google for it)
- OK when the subject is new
After some months such question and its answers will probably look obsolete (and maybe looks like spam) but before this happens I think it'd have really helped the devs.
PS: I know that vala and av1 are not new anymore, the proof is it's easy NOW to find resources about it.
EDIT: I finally found an interesting answer in another SO question. Could someone comment on why my question was considered off-topic when the other wasn't. Does it just escape moderator attention while it should have been moderated too ? The other poster was asking for reasonable example when I asked for non trivial/real worl exemple.