Currently tool-related questions are on-topic on SO but I have a strong feeling that they could be avoided if the tool has better documentation to start with.
Nonsense.
One of the nice things about Stack Overflow is that it can categorize the kinds of information that don't go into documentation.
As a prime example, compiler bugs. Or library bugs. Generally speaking, those don't get documented until they're discovered. And how do you know that you've discovered such a bug?
You need someone to be able to confirm that the documentation or specification says that X should happen, yet you are seeing Y. And we do that here by asking questions about it.
Not to mention, SO-style documentation works based on problems, not topics. Topic documentation is great for reference, but it's generally difficult for solving problems. SO documentation works much better at that.
My point is that everything related to the tool should be available in some form of documentation on the tool website.
Even ignoring what I just said, this is still wrong.
As an example, the C++ standard is publicly available. And yet, even the people who write it don't fully understand every detail of every interaction of every one of its rules (as evidenced by all of the defects that keep getting discovered). So asking about a tool (like a compiler) and whether the compiler's results match with what the standard says is frequently not as simple as "look it up."
Hell, questions on Stack Overflow revealed two rather significant holes in the OpenGL standard.
So the fact that documentation for a topic exists is not sufficient reason to start saying that we shouldn't have questions about that topic.
Should we keep this kind of questions on-topic on SO, which kind of action can we take to improve our content?
Stack Overflow exists for all kinds of programming tools. If we can ask questions about a tool as big as Clang, there is no reason we should be forbidden from asking questions about a tool as small as Rubberduck or whatever.
And if you're saying we can't ask questions about the most basic of programming tools (a compiler)... then what the hell good are we?
Stack Overflow does not need an arbitrary "this tool must be this popular to get questions" rule.