3

It seems questions are all locked and aren't searchable.

If I ask a similar question, I think the same thing will happen to it. However, I learned a lot from Postgres and Python versions of the series and I guess other people benefited, too. Thus, I'd like to see a similar list/collection for newer languages such as Go and Rust.

By its nature the question's broad and discouraged in Stack Overflow, but it is the best fit in SE, I think.

What do you recommend? Is it totally forbidden or is there a middle ground for this type of question?

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  • "Use only for SPECIFIC questions, list-type questions of hidden features are no longer allowed."
    – jonrsharpe
    Nov 19, 2015 at 0:39
  • 1
    Maybe we can make “hidden features” lists again with the upcoming Documentation feature.
    – poke
    Nov 19, 2015 at 8:02

1 Answer 1

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As per the tag information:

About hidden-features: Only used on old and popular locked questions asking for lists of hidden features. Hidden Features is a tag for questions that involve hidden features in a programming language/environment/tool.

This tag is blacklisted (see The mystery of hidden-features tag).

So, in terms of questions about hidden features, it's apparent that things like "What are the hidden features of BCPL?" are frowned upon since it's really just looking for a list of things. But, if you wanted to know if a feature is documented somewhere or whether it's just arcane knowledge, you could possibly get away with something like:

I know BCPL can do base%index to do the same thing as C's base[index] but what are the %%, %! and !% operators? I've seen them in code but Martin Richards' book doesn't seem to cover them. Are these a hidden feature of the BCPL language?

However, I wouldn't suggest using the tag itself, that's probably going to cause you grief.

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  • I'd stay away from the "hidden feature" wording entirely -- your suggested question seems just fine asking what the operators do. Nov 19, 2015 at 5:03
  • Well, if you want to ask if something is a hidden feature, you're probably going to have to use the words hidden and feature somewhere :-) But, granted, it's possibly not necessary to ask that in this case, it was just the best example I could come up with in a hurry. Updated the answer to hopefully improve my intent.
    – paxdiablo
    Nov 19, 2015 at 7:15

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