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So I hopped in the close vote queue today and found this gem. Apparently it was an audit and I failed because I voted to close as too broad. The post looks good except for the question. It is asking about when to use an async javascript doohiky instead of the synchronous version. I felt that answers would have to be "too broad" to explain the difference effectively. To quote the help center:

too broad - if your question could be answered by an entire book, or has many valid answers, it's probably too broad for our format

I can imagine the docs for that particular method has a page on that function. (Also, this came up via google. I can imagine a lengthy discussion involving differences between the two functions based off that alone). Also, debating when to do something asynchronously vs. synchronously is something I've seen some co-workers talk about for quite some time.

Bottom line: I'm not concerned that I failed the audit. What I want to know is:

  1. Is my reasoning OK?
  2. If not, where did I go wrong so I can get it right in the future?
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    The question could be answered by an entire book, but it doesn't have to be. Explaining the difference between an async call and a sync call is a sufficient answer. The question, "When is x - y > 0?" can be answered with an unlimited number of number combinations, or with the simple statement "When x > y". Specifically, this is asking about something they don't understand as part of a library. The answer regarding its purpose can definitely be written a paragraph.
    – Compass
    Feb 5, 2015 at 20:43
  • @Compass Does the fact that a question could be answered with a paragraph save it from being closed? For example doing a quick search on SO I found this question. (Closed as not constructive but would probably be closed as too broad today). I could go to the node.js site and copy their one paragraph description of what node is and use a couple sentences to address the rest of the question. (Just an example, I'm sure I could find other / better examples given time.) If the question should stand, where do we draw the line?
    – Becuzz
    Feb 5, 2015 at 21:40
  • The author is asking for a distinction between two methods. It falls in the similar category as differentiating between slice and substr: stackoverflow.com/questions/2243824/… One can certainly list all unique cases where slice would be more practical to use than substring or substr, but a sufficient explanation is explaining what the two methods are for. Consider the scope of the question. "What is Java" is broad. "What is Java's ternary operator" not so much.
    – Compass
    Feb 5, 2015 at 21:49

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Some types of A/B or multiple-choice questions are perfectly fine on Stack Overflow. They don't have to be completely devoid of subjectivity; they just have to be informative. They don't always have to have one correct answer; few things in computing do.

Example of a good question:

[This language feature] was added to [my favorite programming language], and I can see how it might be useful, but the language already had [this other language feature] that does the same thing. What is the difference, and when would I use one over the other?

Example of a bad question:

Which language is better?

Can you see the difference? The first one is answerable in a few paragraphs; the second one isn't.

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  • That totally makes sense. I'm not sure what I was thinking. Chalking this one up to not enough sleep / caffeine.
    – Becuzz
    Feb 9, 2015 at 15:02

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