As in this recent case discussed: Are questions asking for feature sets of specific software versions on topic? it seems to be the consensus that some areas of questions are depending on the answer for the question being on- or off-topic.
I was thinking that this is a general approach in the way as: "If your post COULD cause a broad list of answers, it is off-topic."
But the actual case was that @Yakk asked the question and answered it, being aware of the amount of bullet points required for the list. Which was considered as being fine in the ratio of information value divided by the amount of bullet points (or whatever decided here being on-topic for that manner).
So I'd like to know, would this have been a different thing, if some one asked this question, not planning to self-answer it, but just for being curious and not knowing the answer? Would it have been ok to ask it, as it is enough to assume that the post COULD be on-topic?
If this approach is ok, this is what I'd accept as answer.
If it isn't (note for the following phrases, I'm not claiming it isn't), I'd like to know, why is it penalized if one too often asks off-topic questions?
If person A asked the same question for language x, where the feature count would be 40, while person B asked it for language y where the feature count would have been 1450. Both not being aware of the answers, why then the question person A asked is on-topic, while the question asked by person B isn't?
To clarify what I'm asking:
Is a questions on-topicness, depending on the answer or on the ways a answer could look? If so, it requires the asker to already know the answer, while if not, it would mean that kind of question, yakk asked isn't ok, since to decide the question being on topic in his case, is argued by the counted points of the answer.