I posted the following question on SO today: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28373291/whats-the-relationship-between-flask-login-and-flask-security
The question was almost immediately put on hold as too broad. I believe it was a proper question. At least, when I run through the suggested checklists, the guidelines, and negative guidance it seemed to be a good question.
I did my research, it was a programming question that I believe will be frequently encountered by professional programmers using the popular python-flask framework, and it is a question that can be answered with specificity in fewer than 2 paragraphs (indeed, it can be answered in 1 sentence). Answers would also be votable, in the sense that there is a sense of both precision and correctness about the answers as it is not a subjective question.
It feels like the SO moderating system has become unconstructively restrictive over the past few years. If a question like this is too broad, and SO is restricted to truly narrow questions, does this ratchet the forum ever increasingly into answering programming minutiae rather than programming questions? This feels very much like the triumph of pedantry over principle.
Here are some of the most wildly popular, useful, and enlightening questions on SO. They are popular because they are great questions and, importantly, they contain truly great answers by truly great community members. They are good enough to be wisdoms that programmers pass on to colleagues, educators pass onto their students, and countless others bookmark. But yet, I'm quite sure that if any of these were posed today, they would immediately go on hold thanks to zealous hold-voters/moderators, and the community (and the public at large) would be unable to answer and consequently deprived of the wisdom which has delighted and educated thousands of programmers around the world:
- The Definitive C++ Book Guide and List
- What and where are the stack and heap?
- How do JavaScript closures work?
- The definitive guide to form-based website authentication
- What is a plain English explanation of "Big O" notation?
- What exactly is RESTful programming?
I can't change the rules at SO, and I'm just one voice. But in the same way that one idiot can exclaim that the emperor has no clothes, I'd like to ask SO to review its rules on question scope and, as importantly, the mechanisms which allow good programming questions to be placed on hold by pedantic moderators.
The continuation of a policy of overrestriction on questions leads to a giant collection of minutiae, at the opportunity cost of building a monumental trove of programming wisdom that addresses meaningful programming questions for a global community.