Where do questions about technologies go?
I'm going to start by asking a question. For each of the following technologies, what's the difference between programming in them and just using them?
- bash
- PowerShell
- Command Prompt
- SQL
- Python (It does have a REPL and a
-c
argument, you know)
The best answer to that question is, "If there is one, it's so small it's not worth even thinking about." Maybe you could say, "If you're saving a script," but that's an utterly useless distinction, especially in terms of StackExchange site categorization and where a user could openly lie about it and no one would be the wiser.
Another question: where do questions about vim go? They could go here on SO, since this is something software developers use regularly. They could also go on SuperUser, since it's just a text editor that's used in routine tasks when using some operating systems.
Here's the common thread: questions about these technologies can be reasonably asked and answered by developers because they use these tools and encounter problems with them as part of participating in their field. Questions about them could also be asked elsewhere because they're not exclusively used by developers.
That fact applies to the technologies in the questions you linked as well. xcopy is definitely a tool software developers commonly use in scripts. MongoDB is definitely a tool developers commonly use to store their data. Okay, they're not the most stellar questions ever. Sure. The first one could maybe get a better answer on SuperUser. And okay, the second question is probably poorly researched. But that doesn't mean that the topics they address are outside the site's scope. These are reasonable questions for a programmer to run into during the course of developing software, and that means the subject matter is in scope for SO.
We shouldn't try to make categorizing questions on StackExchange as strict as our compilers are.
There's a pretty sizable chunk of overlap between SO and its sister SuperUser, Programmers, DBA, and ServerFault sites. That's fine. It's okay if some questions could fit on multiple sites and even if they're posted on multiple sites. No puppies or kittens will die if a cross-site dupe exists. This is a pretty regular occurrence between SciFi and Movies & TV, and the sites aren't burning down for it.
I'd also like to make note of the definition of SO's subject matter from the help:
- a specific programming problem, or
- a software algorithm, or
- software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
- a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development
Some users emphasize the word "unique" there, but as I've demonstrate with my earlier questions, this isn't something we can define very strictly. It's also worth noting that they didn't choose the word "exclusively," which would more clearly convey the idea that it cannot be something related to another field. This could perhaps be better worded as "strongly related to software development," but the point is to paint a bit of a picture that, "This site is for software development problems." Pretty much every word in that description has some level of vagueness or subjectivity.
What problem are we trying to solve?
Sites are assigned a specific topic to help solve the problem of which experts need to view these questions. We have further divisions within individual SEs (tags), of course, but choosing the site is the first step. It identifies the field of experts the asker needs to reach. Most software development experts familiar with the technologies in question are perfectly capable of answering these questions. So we're left asking, "What problem are you trying to solve by closing these questions?"
I think this is an XY-problem. You're concerned about site quality (We all are.), but you've gone down the wrong path to solving it. Go back a level to the question above this one: what can we do to improve question quality? I think you'll find that, "Closing all questions that ask about details of executing a tool," is not a good solution to that problem.