A little introduction. AT commands are the language "spoken" by modems. They are just a set of commands made up of ASCII characters starting with AT
and closed by \r
, each performing a specific action (either setting internal parameters or starting actual actions). All these characters are sent to the modem though a serial interface (for example, USB or RS-232) from an host processor: it might be a PC or an embedded microcontroller. There's often a program managing it.
I admit [at-command] is a niche tag. Nevertheless, it is relevant for programmers having to deal with modems while writing their host applications that, for some reason, need to send data through a cellular device. Here it is an example of a high scored answer in this tag.
However, often happens that OPs ask questions containing some keywords that trigger reviewers to close them as off-topic: "GPIO", "baud rate", "reboot", "HW flow control" and so on. An example here: OP tried to reboot the device with a command, they didn't succeed, so they asked for the correct command to be provided.
In my opinion such a question seems legitimate, as it's not relevant that the question asked about a reboot instead of the commands required to send data through TCP: they both ask for AT commands doing something. So, since I've some knowledge of the topic, I voted for reopening it and I tried to help the OP providing the solution in a comment.
But maybe I'm wrong. So I ask: is, in general, the at-commands tag on topic on Stack Overflow, even when asking something not directly related to a C program or a Python script? If yes, I'll accept the verdict and I'll simply stop following the tag and I won't "fight" anymore for reopening closed questions1.
But, if these questions are "legal", what can I do to improve the management of these borderline questions?
1 These fights are rarely successful, anyway, as it is very difficult to get a question reopened. And, to be honest, this is a so low traffic tag that even obtaining the closure of a question that blatantly deserve it is really difficult (an example: once a user opened exactly the same question, with the same words, in a couple days. Unfortunately my closure flag timed out).
-mtime
comes to mind (rounding to nearest day (off by one problem) and direction (older/younger))). Is using piped commands on the command line (e.g.find
,grep
,xargs
,head
,tail
, andperl
) a form of programming?at
... cron-related command is [at-utility]. (I "correct" the tag whenever I find that the wrong one is used).modem-at-command
(@PeterMortensen yes, I read what you said, but this is what it's most associated with).modem-at-command
would be ok; anyway [pedantic]Hayes commands are just a subset of all the AT commands set; more precisely those likeATD
.ATH
and so on[/pedantic]