Recently, I've been bumping into a noticeable number of XY problem questions (see also What is the XY problem?).
The specific one that incited me to write this is How to continue a frame execution from last attempted instruction after handling an exception?.
Let's see what happens there:
- The OP asks about Y (how to "resume" after exception)
- others are dazzled and wonder why they need it, say this isn't really possible etc
- the OP eventually tells X (recover from an error down the stack)
- the accepted and most upvoted answer actually answers that question instead of the original one
The first impulse I had was to reformulate/advise to reformulate the question to X. But then, I realized that in that case, it would be closed as too broad/opinion-based!
So,
- a user cannot ask about his actual problem in fear of the question being closed
- asking about a solution instead
- produces an XY problem (which, as per the above link, wastes resources)
- yields answers that do not correspond to the question
- but actually address the original problem
Consequently,
- this is a working way to trick the community into answering a question it otherwise wouldn't - in fact, a necessary trick to get around the (draconian) scope limit
- the scope limit thus doesn't actually work as the community invariably sees such questions as valid
Thus, the question is:
- Which way to go?
- allow users to actually ask about problems they have and aren't quite sure how to solve?
- on some conditions, perhaps
- further limit the scope by prohibiting to address anything other than what was originally asked?
- note that programming is by its nature R&D work - i.e. in vast majority of cases, a person doesn't know how to solve a problem beforehand
- leave it as is which means endorse/condone necessary tricks like this?
- allow users to actually ask about problems they have and aren't quite sure how to solve?