From Rosinante's epic answer:
While you may be an exemplary, clear-thinking, individual, who uses the term 'best practice' in a constructive manner, you have been preceded by a giant procession of zombies who use it as the antithesis of thought. Instead of understanding the important specifics of their situation and looking for an appropriate solution, all they want is to spot a herd in the distance and go trotting off after it. Thus, the term 'best practice' has been rendered an extremely strong signal of a empty resonant cavity in the place where a brain should be, and questions that mention the phrase get closed.
As you see, if you actually succeed in not being too vague ("unclear what you are asking") and in restricting the scope appropriately ("too broad"), your question still runs afoul of bike-shedding and flame-wars, and is thus "primarily opinion-based".
Sometimes, you might have a clumsily asked on-topic question whether something does what you think it does (or how it falls short and/or needs to be corrected) hidden in there, but it's your task to discover it and bring it to the surface. Most likely, that question is still hiding in your subconscious, needing lots more thought to coalesce.