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For those of you who don't know, a Hail-Mary pass is a maneuver in American Football which is executed late in a losing game, in the desperate hope that a miracle will occur.

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On Stack Overflow, this often takes these forms (this is not a comprehensive list):

  1. I have this highly obscure/obsolete product, which I have documentation for the API, but I'm having [specific] problems with it. Does anyone know why, and how can I fix it?

  2. I have this product, which I want to use with this other product, and I read the documentation for both products, but I didn't find the method I'm looking for that frobnosticates the two products together. Is there a way to do it?

  3. I have a well-known product, and I'm trying to do [this] with it, but I can't figure out how [because said company's customer-service sucks, and I think I can get a faster answer here].

Such questions are often accompanied by the phrase "Is it possible?"; their defining characteristic is that they require someone with exactly the knowledge they're looking for, but the likelihood that someone with that exact knowledge wandering in and answering their question is vanishingly small.

Hence the name "Hail-Mary question." It requires the single person in the stadium audience, who actually knows the answer, to be standing in the end-zone at the precise moment that the ball is thrown.

In the past, we would close such questions as "Too Localized," but that close reason no longer exists, and there was some grousing about how we used to close too many questions as Too Localized.

Are these questions on-topic for Stack Overflow? If they are not, under what theory do we "on-hold" them?

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    Frobnosticates? Let me get my dictionary...
    – animuson StaffMod
    Sep 17, 2013 at 2:57
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    @chuex: Not necessarily. If such questions are asked too early, the background knowledge that people have about the technology will eventually catch up. Sep 17, 2013 at 3:09
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    Related: youtube.com/watch?v=q3ykWbu2Gl0 Sep 17, 2013 at 3:21
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    @RobertHarvey "too localized" means the answer is unlikely to help any future readers. This is entirely independent from the number of people that can answer the question. There are plenty of very hard questions that only a handful of people could answer, but that very many people would be helped by reading the answer.
    – Servy
    Sep 17, 2013 at 4:17
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    @Servy: Not to put too fine a point on it, but a question that never gets an answer is useful to nobody. It's less than useless, because it attracts visitors who have to take the time to process the fact that the question has no answer. It's an Internet dead end, in other words, like all too many forum posts. Sep 17, 2013 at 4:56
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    @Robert Well, yeah, it's not all that useful, because it hasn't been answered yet. That doesn't make the question itself bad. I'm calling out the "less than useless" thing, though: there's no difference here between someone visiting a non-answered question asked yesterday, and a non-answered question asked 10 months ago; both are "internet dead ends' for the time being. Sep 17, 2013 at 5:09
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    @JonathanHobbs: Erm, except that the one asked ten months ago has been trapping people for... say, about ten months. Sep 17, 2013 at 5:13
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    @Robert Right, so do we go closing questions that haven't been answered after 10 months? Sep 17, 2013 at 5:24
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    I don't actually see anything wrong with this "internet dead end" thing. Person googles the issue, comes here from a result, finds no answer, keeps googling, may still find no answer. That doesn't make the question bad for existing. Sep 17, 2013 at 5:25
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    @JonathanHobbs Yes, the system already automatically closes (and deletes? don't remember) questions that haven't attracted attention (views/answers/comments) according to some algorithm. I personally think it is too lax, but that may just be me. I seem to remember that the rules were about to be tightened, but not sure if it has happened yet.
    – Monolo
    Sep 17, 2013 at 8:45
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    @Servy: Maybe I wasn't completely clear about the whole "Hail Mary" thing, but I'm basically talking about questions that have no hope of ever being answered. Sep 17, 2013 at 14:53
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    @RobertHarvey Well, none of your examples are questions that couldn't ever be answers. They're questions that probably have a lower probability of being answered; they're harder to answer. That's a far cry from "can't be answered".
    – Servy
    Sep 17, 2013 at 14:56
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    @Servy: Here's a good example of a Hail Mary question: stackoverflow.com/q/18903358 Sep 19, 2013 at 19:56
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    I can't believe nobody's mentioned the Tumbleweed badge. I'm pretty sure the entire point of that badge is to 1) provide consolation for common questions that are pushed into obscurity by other circumstances, and 2) reward questions that are obscure due to a lack of experts in their domain, which can often result in low activity in the first week.
    – BoltClock
    May 19, 2014 at 17:26
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    I sure hope they are on topic here! This question of mine: stackoverflow.com/questions/9486752/… is so absurdingly bizarre that it took years to get an answer. Athe bless the user who answered it. I would be scared if it had been removed before. Jun 16, 2014 at 9:45

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Yes, they're on topic.

(...) their defining characteristic is that they require someone with exactly the knowledge they're looking for, but the likelihood that someone with that exact knowledge wandering in and answering their question is vanishingly small.

All three examples you listed seem like perfectly valid questions to me. Whether the expertise exists to answer it isn't a problem with the question itself: it could be perfectly fine, and the fact a question might require specialist knowledge doesn't make that question bad - it's the reason we're here!

Whether a question might not get answered has nothing to do with whether it's a good, on topic question. They simply have no connection. It's not a problem with the question itself. It just indicates a missing in our audience's expertise. It's not the question's problem if we don't have someone with the required expertise to answer it (yet).

I don't even see why these would get closed as too localised - that sounds like a terrible misuse of that close vote reason to me.

How would you close these, anyway?

The identifying criteria for these questions is that they have a small chance of being answered. Obscurity does not make things off topic here.

In light of the fact we can't see the future, the only way to determine whether a question fits this criteria is to wait a few weeks or months. We can't close it right away saying "I don't think this will get answered", since a weird-looking question might get answered the following day by someone who had to go down that weird road a few weeks ago.

This wait-and-see thing would just boil down to this rules change: every question that doesn't get answered within X weeks/months is automatically off topic and close-worthy. That would be silly. Let's not do this.

The fact we can't judge anything about this by the question alone is, to me, the strongest indicator that these questions are fine and there's nothing wrong with them.

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    Yep. My Hail Mary on Super User eventually bore fruit, too. Though by then I had solved the problem another way. Sep 17, 2013 at 4:00
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    "they have a small chance of being answered" -- funny things happen when this chance turns out fat. Most of isitpossible questions I've seen quickly catch 10-20 low quality answers pointing to, well, the tool that just makes itpossible, proving that these are just tool recommendations behind the smokescreen. Oh and about 99% of these are insufficient research "oy wey I'm so desperate I googled alot (yeah sure like whole 5 minutes) and couldn't find anything"
    – gnat
    Sep 17, 2013 at 6:57
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    @gnat This question is not about the Is it possible? category of questions, though - just a category which appears to often intersect with that one. Two of the three examples given in the question aren't Is it possible? questions; Robert just said that the questions he's asking about often are also Is it possible? questions. It isn't the thing being talked about here, and the main problem here aren't questions that ask whether something is possible (that's just a tangential related issue). That's probably worth addressing separately though! Sep 17, 2013 at 7:02
  • @JonathanHobbs well, then the question is how do I distinguish these rare true Hail-Mary questions from mountains of crap that contains the same isitpossible cliche? "It walks and quacks" like a duck, now tell me what to look for to find out it's not a duck indeed?
    – gnat
    Sep 17, 2013 at 12:54
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    @gnat Robert's criteria was just obscure questions that have a very small chance of being answered. That's it. I quoted the defining characteristic he provided, and it wasn't that the questions ask if something's possible. What do Is it possible? questions have to do with that? (By contrast it sounds like they get answered plenty, and are problematic for entirely different reasons) Sep 17, 2013 at 13:04
  • @JonathanHobbs yeah, in the hindsight it seems easy. But, when it just pops up and there are no answers yet, how do I know about their chance of being answered? Am I expected to wait until it catches 5-10-20 crappy answers there-s-your-tool before casting close vote? Example: Is it possible to debug the WF used to build in VS2012? (23 hours passed, no answers yet)
    – gnat
    Sep 17, 2013 at 13:06
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    @gnat ... I don't know. Like I said, this isn't about is-it-possible questions - at all. Maybe you should create another question about how to respond to those. Sep 17, 2013 at 13:08
  • @JonathanHobbs wait a minute... the idea of your answer is one would better abstain of closing these questions, right? Now you tell me you don't know how to distinguish these from much more frequent crappy questions that are indeed close-worthy, right? and your answer doesn't even mention that one may have trouble trying to figure that. But then, how can this answer be useful to close voter / flagger? I mean, the way it is stated now, it just reads as "if you see is-it-possible, just keep it open (...until it picks a solid amount of crappy answers?)"
    – gnat
    Sep 17, 2013 at 13:31
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    @gnat "wait a minute... the idea of your answer is one would better abstain of closing these questions, right?" If by "these questions" you mean "questions which theoretically have a low chance of being answered", yes. If you mean "is it possible? questions", then no, I'm not even acknowledging those in this answer. I put it to you that if you think my answer is addressing is-it-possible questions, or if you think this question is about those, you have misread something. If you expect me to respond to those... I don't care about them, this question isn't about those. Sep 17, 2013 at 13:41
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    I'm not particularly bothered by "is it possible" questions. Their real question, of course, is "what code do I need to use to accomplish this?" And we already know how to handle those. Sep 17, 2013 at 15:26
  • Sometime such questions get an answer, or even two! Shameless plug: stackoverflow.com/questions/27713660/pdf-js-get-the-text-colour Jan 20, 2015 at 10:46

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