Why can't I ask broad, opinion-based questions that could help answer some fundamental conceptual misunderstandings about programming.
Why does every question have to be a very specific question?
It's not that I don't see the value of having specific questions answered it's just not everything can be specified
Case in point:
You've gone through the tutorials, you know vars, arrays, functions, algorithms but when it comes time to sit down and just program you're lost. Now, what's wrong with asking the community of programmers "hey, how do you go about tying all these concepts together, what are some strategies to help make me better at programming"?
Yes this is a broad question that's bound to get a slew of opinionated responses but if just one person answers something that truly helps you expand your understanding and points you in the right direction, why does this question get closed?
I think there comes a point in programming that you have to ask broad philosophical questions to get any further.
Maybe my example question is a bad example but I was taught that the only stupid question is the one nobody asks.
Stack Overflow is hands down the largest supplier of technical expertise on a broad range of topics yet I don't post questions on here, questions that I desperately need answers to, due to ridicule and embarrassment.
The problem is I'm still trying to figure out the question and I'm not sure how to ask because I don't know what it's even called.
So please explain to me why this simply isn't allowed; why does everything have to fit inside a box, if one can prove mathematically that this idiom is counterproductive to what Stack Exchange actually exists for?