For example, if I'm reading a technical manual and need clarification of a given block of text, can I request that fellow readers and/or the author paraphrase a particular section, or provide missing detail?
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11If you manage to make all the examples and citations clear, why not? What do you mean with "fair" BTW? That's not a matter of fairness but if it's an on-topic question, as usual.– πάντα ῥεῖJun 7, 2015 at 21:23
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I can't think of why the source of a question, a book instead of online documentation (or code or whatever), in and of itself would make it off topic.– BSMPJun 7, 2015 at 21:49
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5As @πάνταῥεῖ says, it must be an on-topic question, no added restrictions nor extra license. Which among others means it has to be reasonably self-contained. Specifically, your question may not in any way rely on anyone else having your book.– DeduplicatorJun 7, 2015 at 21:56
2 Answers
"can I request that fellow readers and/or the author paraphrase a particular section, or provide missing detail?"
Sure you can, as long you provide enough citation (and/or concise and complete code samples) that makes your question self contained.
You may not expect anyone to be familiar with the referenced material by just linking to it, or leaving a book's title. This kind of question would be considered being off-topic.
I believe it's acceptable as long as you clearly state where you are stuck and provide any additional information that illustrates your thought process. That will give us a good idea what to explain.
In my (not so humble) opinion it's not acceptable to post an excerpt with just a request to explain it.