I've asked this question, which was closed as too broad. It is about the approximate performance of a library function that is commonly used in a great many environments.
Someone further commented that the question is off-topic, but I believe it is not. I went through the guidelines of what's on topic and could not really pinpoint anything that makes this question off-topic. A linked, similar question received useful answers.
Assuming that the question is on-topic, is it too broad? I initially asked a more generic version that allows various environments to be included and/or compared in an answer. I believe this makes sense, as it would give the reader a feeling about when to consider the performance impact on a cellphone rather to a dedicated server box, etc.
However, as per the suggestions in the comments, I later narrowed it down to just one architecture. While I find this a tad unfortunate, the question should still be useful.
I'm wondering if this kind of question is useful when asked for a rather specific environment. Is it better, or worse, to address a broader range of environments? This thread seems to suggest that, if an environment is specified, performance questions are on-topic. I'm unsure if this is merely allowed, or necessary.
My personal goal for my questions is to make them "as broad as possible yet as narrow as required", i.e. narrow enough to be answerable, but as long as this is given, staying generic so they apply to more use cases. However, unlike in the early days of SO, my impression in recent years is that this is poorly received and should be avoided.
What I want: