I recently asked this question: https://stackoverflow.com/q/27930731/1042555
It appears that a lot of people think it's a bad question, and no one thinks it's good.
To be fair, the initial version of my question contained some bugs and syntax errors, and I should have been less lazy and checked the code first. I later tried to edit to correct these.
Anyhow, the question isn't really subjective. One could mistakenly reply with a subjective answer (e.g. "I don't think you should use the second version because I think it's ugly", one commenter said something along these lines but didn't quite explain) but then I believe subjective answers are already not allowed. I was specifically interested in more concrete answers: For instance, perhaps a respected GUI guru has written a book (unknown to me) where they explain why one of these is a bad idea, and someone would submit that as an answer. I also tried to make this clear in an edit (this was reverted by Will after I asked this question here on MSO).
To be clear, I'm not trying to whine about my question being downvoted/closed. Regardless of moderation, I have 2 downvotes and no upvotes, and that's sufficient to convince that the question is inappropriate regardless of the reason.
I would, however, like to understand the reason:
- Is the problem that I phrased it such that it appears to invite subjective responses?
- Is the problem that I unknowingly suggested an unpopular practice?
- Are questions about best practices considered inappropriate as a rule? For instance, "Is using
goto
a bad idea?" isn't really a matter of opinion, and can be answered with logical arguments. Is that still not good enough? - Did I just shoot myself in the foot by not checking with an IDE that my code is correct, and everyone was too pissed off by the time I corrected it?
goto
even if the rest of us do consider it a bad idea. They can post their opinon just the same as anyone else. "Best practices" from what I've seen tend to not work out well.