I just asked this question. It's a fake question used as an umbrella for a long answer where I tried to collect many common issues about Unicode text management and globalization stuff.
In my intention it had to be a generic self-answered question to be used as general guidance to begin a deeper study of the topic and to dupe close all almost similar questions (Which code page for non-Unicode file names in ZIP files? or In C#, how can I count characters in a string?).
To me it seems perfectly reasonable and there are many examples (also few from me), but this question received (well also its self-answer even if they should be unrelated) some downvotes and four close votes which makes me think I may be wrong. One user pointed to this meta question: Can you answer your own questions on Stack Overflow? where accepted answer states that:
This is not a place to post a blog so make sure that the question/answer is general enough to be helpful to other members, but not so broad that it doesn't target a specific programming issue.
So my question is: is this self-answered question too "blog post"y to be useful and should it simply be deleted (no matters how many times I'll have to copy & paste paragraphs from it)?
More in general: I would like to know if this kind of umbrella questions can be bad questions, because their value come from question and answer, together, like evergreen Saunder's question What is a NullReferenceException and how do I fix it?. Obviously, the question alone is terrible, but it's valuable (and highly upvoted), because it's a great highly used reference.
Reasoning: I like to see Stack Overflow not only as a patches repository or a long list of footnotes to MSDN, MDN, man pages, javadoc and so on. Is it a quick fix my problem site? In my mind it has to be a knowledge repository, a learning resource then a broad question and a long post are welcome if they are general enough to help someone else.
I can't understand: with hundred answers that, for example, suggests C# string length is the number of characters in the text (even highly upvoted and accepted, propagating this misconception with no mention it's wrong)...we worry if a question is too broad and/or good by itself? Really? Are these things relegated to our blogs and Stack Overflow is a place for half-working solutions where you need great time to pick a little bit better one? I think very specific real-world questions are (rare) pearls, but they're hard to find and longer to understand: I'm searching solution for X, this post talks about Y, move on. EDIT question has been closed, reopened then closed again...I'm still waiting feedback here on meta (answers/comments), but I start to think I've been just pretty unlucky when I saw posts I linked (and many others) then I should simply delete that bad (because too broad) useless (because everyone knows and judging by votes the answer is also completely wrong) question...
I can't see official guidance and then I would collect some feedback on meta, what do users want? What's the Stack Overflow team's direction about this? What should I do? Stop doing this? Downvoting and closing each post like this I see on Stack Overflow? Is a C# FAQ (similar to C++ FAQ that exists on Stack Overflow) a bad idea?