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The following question is not asking someone to find a tool or recommend a library

How do I use SimplSockets with a delegate for a "hello world" project?

It is about & regarding an off-site resource, but everything technically is an off site resource.

Can anyone clarify the reasoning to me?

Either way I answered my own question and my personal investment is nill in it; other than the outcome of this meta post.

2 Answers 2

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I agree with you; I don’t think the current close votes are valid.

Indeed, there are two things that could have been interpreted as an off-site resource:

  • The ‘input’: You’re using some external library. I don’t see this as a big deal; there’s plenty of nonstandard libraries being used, but I don’t see anyone calling a witch-hunt on .

  • The ‘output’: Some questions explicitly ask for recommendations on off-site resources, like libraries or tutorials. These are off-topic.

Your question here on Meta seems to focus a little on the input-side of it, but I think the people who have voted to close are objecting to the output-side. In particular, your original question was very specific about “looking for something”:

Looking for a “Hello World” of SimplSocket() library

I'm looking for a sample on how to configure and use SimplSocket, and found none. […] I'm hoping the sample will mention […]

If you really were looking for some sort of off-site resource as it appeared, it’s off-topic. But there is an easy way to get around this: rather than asking for some sort of resource, ask for whatever content you know might appear in such a resource. In your specific case of asking for a sample of how to do X, you might instead just ask how to do X. I tried to make that more explicit in my edit.

Now, that doesn’t necessarily mean you’re off home-free; in particular, you could still get bitten by the ‘too broad’ close reason if the resulting snippet is expected to be long enough. But that’s a separate concern; rewording to ask how to do something rather than resources on how to do it gets you a little further.

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  • Thank you for your very articulate and specific way of describing the problem and getting me to understand how I can improve. Love the metaphor to IO Aug 3, 2014 at 5:06
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I was one of the ones who originally voted to close. It was a question nakedly asking for code and I have always been under the impression that such questions, without any demonstration of an effort to write the code themself, is off-topic.

For reference, here's the original version of the question:


I'm looking for a sample on how to configure and use [SimplSocket][1], and found none.

I checked:

  • [Stackoverflow][2]
  • [The author's blog][3]
  • [Git][4] (no unit tests to get me there)
  • Google
  • Yes, even Bing.

I'm hoping the sample will mention any need for IDisposable, or any quirks relevant in a multithreaded environment. Also, how to correctly initialize it, send data, etc.

... anything to get my mind thinking "concurrently" on sockets would be helpful.


If the above question is actually on-topic, then that runs contrary to a vast array of other questions that the community closes with extreme regularity.

That being said, the question as written now is a lot better and I suspect I would not have closed it as it stands. Though it still seems borderline to me.

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  • 2
    To me it's also still too broad.
    – BartoszKP
    Aug 3, 2014 at 16:09
  • To me, lots of stackoverflow questions are voted off topic by those with lots of "reputation" I think they get in a hurry looking for more points
    – stuck
    Aug 3, 2014 at 19:10
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    @stuck huh? you don't earn rep for closing questions.
    – Kirk Woll
    Aug 3, 2014 at 19:30

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