I've been on SE for a while and while and mainly use it for C & Python programming questions.
As you could imagine, nearly all of the obvious questions have already been asked. So I find when it comes to asking a question, its almost always ends up being a corner-case, obscure-situation... (where existing conventional wisdom doesn't necessarily apply, or the specific case is an exception to the rule).
Apart from stating in the question that I know I'm asking about some corner case (which I do at times), Im not sure how else to ask these questions.
My concern is:
- Just because a question is about a corner case, doesn't mean its an invalid question.
(though understandably, it may not get up-voted much since not many other developers would run into the problem). - Such questions are often swiftly replied and/or down-voted with a "Why would anyone want to do that!".
- Knee-jerk reactions to such questions are a deterrent to asking questions on rare problems.
Maybe I have to put some big disclaimer above the questions saying:
yes this is bad practice in almost-all-cases and mostly you would avoid doing ... but one time I needed to because ... and there are a few cases where the typical solutions fail.
Does anyone have advice on asking questions in a field where most common-cases have already been covered.
Am willing to accept some of my questions are down-voted because they are straight out bad too :)
"Such questions are often swiftly replied and/or down-voted with a "Why would anyone want to do that!"
. So, it's not only my impression