Imagine that someone is putting great effort into writing a "catch-all" question with answers for a certain topic.
The answers mostly already exist in one form or another, but this question is meant to be an intentionally "too broad / unclear" question so that it can be used for canonically closing any question that may ask one aspect or another in the broad topic.
Instead of arguing with people on Stack Overflow whether or not it is good a direction, I would like to hear what you guys think about it.
I will not share my opinion about it to stay neutral and not lead the opinions that may come. I would like to sincerely hear what the community thinks.
Let us imagine a topic like this:
Importing some library into some C++ project using some IDE with some build system on some operating system and architecture with some compiler and version.
Then, the OP would expect to get many small answers in one thread, basically replicating the existing and modularized threads to be a catch-all and canonical thread.
As you can see it is intentionally a very broad topic. Naturally, I have my own opinion about it and pro/cons, but I would hold it off for a second.
Please note that this is not about any existing case, just a general strategy question on Stack Overflow whether get such "too broad / unclear" and "catch-all" questions.
Importing some library into some C++ project using some IDE with some build system on some operating system and architecture with some compiler and version.
and there might be many answers and/or sections covering each aspect that needs to be handled separately. For example, qmake buildsystem is one section/answer, cmake another, foo IDE is another, and bar IDE is yet another, etc.