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As we know, tool recommendations is off topic here, but what if OP asks for both coding solutions/algorithm and finding tools (either one to solve the problem)?

Examples:

this

this

Is it still considered as off topic? Or we can just remove the sentences about fing tools?

And, if a question is about finding tools to solve a problem, but the problem can actually be solved by algorithm/internal library, is it still considered as off topic?

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    That question should be closed because neither asking for a library nor asking for an algorithm / piece of code (which comes under category - too broad) are acceptable. Apr 1, 2016 at 9:26
  • "Looking for an algorithm for X" can sometimes be edited into a reasonably-scoped "How do I do X?" question. (Though many are still too broad.) I'm not sure if adding "you don't have to write the code for me" helps; sometimes that will make the question very nonspecific, other times something like "you need to use a union-find data structure" is entirely satisfactory, and the asker can follow up with another question if they need specific help implementing it. Apr 1, 2016 at 9:40
  • This also sometimes depends on the answers -- if there's a good "You don't need a library for this, you can do foo" answer, you should try to edit the question to save it. If all the answers are just links to libraries, it's less important. (Particularly relevant in the reopen queue.) Apr 1, 2016 at 9:45
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    @JeffreyBosboom - I am not sure if that is a good idea. We don't want people answering You don't need a library for this, you can do foo, oh wait or bar.. Um nope, you could do boo which works faster tha foo but is slower than coo-o-o" answer . We want people asking Trying to do foo in bar gives shoo error or something. Apr 1, 2016 at 9:48
  • @TheLostMind The first is a bad answer, not because of the question but because it waffles; an answer that clearly presents the tradeoff between two alternative solutions sounds like a good answer to me (though you could argue it should be split into two answers for separate voting). I'm slightly disappointed by your second example; Stack Overflow is not (yet) purely a debugging service. But we are drifting from the topic of this question, so I will leave it at that. Apr 1, 2016 at 9:57
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    Possible duplicate of How to handle a question that asks many things
    – gnat
    Apr 1, 2016 at 10:11
  • Your examples are 3 years old and shouldn't be used as a guide as to what is currently considered on or off topic.
    – BSMP
    Apr 1, 2016 at 15:08

1 Answer 1

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If a user posts a multi-part question, go with the lowest common denominator.

If four parts are on-topic and interesting, but a fifth part is off-topic because, say, it asks for a library/tool, down/close vote and move on.

If users insist on asking a multi-part question, then they get multiple chances of down/close votes.

It's only fair....

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  • I disagree with this answer. We shouldn't turn away a good question because of one part asking for a tool. Editing is the preferred solution -- quick and easy, and it takes only 1 person!
    – hichris123
    Apr 1, 2016 at 17:11

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