There never has been and never will be a rule that code in a question must be copy-pasteable and runnable without any effort required from potential answerers, which is what seems to be implied here and in the linked question.
One would not always have to provide a list of imports that are implied by a language, framework and library; we have tags for those. In the context of my bread and butter, the .NET ecosystem, requiring askers to provide a list of imports for System
, System.IO
, System.Threading.Tasks
, System.Linq
, System.Collections.Generic
and whatnot is going to add boilerplate that nobody reads and nobody uses because any IDE you use in .NET either adds those imports to new source files by default, or they use implicit usings which tell the compiler to use those imports for every source file.
What is required, is that a question contains the minimal code necessary to reproduce the problem.
If the problem is a compiler/linker/interpreter/runtime error complaining about an unknown type, an ambiguous reference or a nonexistent member, then of course, the asker should provide their imports/usings/whatchamacallit. Ask for that in comments and at the same time close-vote as "Needs debugging details".
If the problem is about writing a particular query in Entity Framework (according to the question title, question body and/or tags), and the code compiles just fine but gives a runtime exception or unexpected data results, then no, one should definitely not be required to show in their code that they are using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore
, that is implied by the context.
If the problem is about an algorithm, control flow, compiler rules, anything else and there are nontrivial, unobvious classes being used that are in the question's code but not actually related to the problem, then we do not need their imports; we need them to rewrite their code from scratch to create an actual MRE.
To circle back to my first paragraph and thereby my opinion: if you as an answerer cannot imply the imports being used from the question context and the problem in question has nothing to do with imports (or you are unable to deduct so), then sure, it might be that the question is lacking context (again: title, body, tags) or code (imports), but it could also be that perhaps you're not the best fit to answer that question in the first place.
It irks me to see questions being close-voted as unclear/non-repro where with a little experience in the relevant tags you can see that the OP has actually left nothing relevant out, but the close-voter lacks knowledge to answer it. That is not a reason to close-vote; just move along and find something you are able to answer.
interface; function f(); end function; end interface; end program
requires no feedback about a missing import statement; the import statement ininterface; function f(); import i; end function; end interface; end program
is useless and confusing.Pattern.compile("[a-z]")
is incomprehensible and the average user who looks at it would be left wondering whether OP usesjava.util.regex.Pattern
or something else. Enough that they would not be able to work with this code to understand it or try to produce an answer. Do we have some record of Java questions having such complaints en masse? Because I kind of feel there isn't really such "confusion" going on enough to make imports a broad sweeping requirement.List
which exists asjava.util.List
- a data structure where ordered data is held and alsojava.awt.List
which comes from the GUI standard library for Java and it is a list control where multiple values can be displayed and selected. Eclipse, at least last I used it, preferred to import the latter automatically becausejava.awt
is first alphabetically compared tojava.util
. Surely, like Eclipse, this should be vastly confusing for all readers on SO, as well when not specified. Is that the case?