One of the major issues with these sorts of questions is that they have infinite permutations. Historically this has caused a lot of discussion and arguments in the comments, along with close/re-open wars.
More broadly, puzzle questions are often perceived as being written for one of two reasons:
- To get a popular post
- To gain reputation for the OP (a high amount, as one of these questions will very well take you in to your quota for the day and likely the week).
These posts generally take the form:
- Write about some basic, but well known construct of a language
- Show an ambiguous case with little to no 'real world' application
- Ask why
Where these questions are often interesting is that they have the potential to get good answers (of course, so could any question, so this is hardly an argument for keeping them around). More often than not, they become the WAT of the Stack Overflow Community for a brief time, and are then forgotten (WAT is awesome because it happened once and was executed well. We hate fun, so we don't want too much of it).
So this variation should be rare.
Another variation of the "Weird feature that produces unexpected result" question is where someone finds a bug in the compiler.
These questions are similar to the first type; but their minor differences make all the difference:
- They generally deal with an actual bug; not a quirk, an actual bug in the compiler.
- They have a real world impact
- And like the above, they're interesting and counter-intuitive.
We embrace actual problems programmers face because they're the problems that affect more than just the asker (and aren't contrived). For that reason and the other reasons I listed, 'puzzle' questions like the above should be off-topic and closed.
function foo() { return 'fail'; }
instead" to be acceptable answers? :-)