The specific Question I have in mind: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47835373/safely-making-wide-reaching-change-to-ioc-di-config
Summary:
- I asked a question asking how to do an obscure and difficult thing that most people wouldn't even bother trying to do.
- No-one offered an answer and some users approximately asserted that there didn't exist a technical solution.
- I developed a technical solution for myself over the course of the subsequent month.
- I came back to self-answer, in order to document my solution to other developers.
- When I came back, I found that the question had been closed.
- No-one has given a reason for the question to be closed other than one assertion that a technical solution doesn't exist (which, given that I've developed one, is obviously false)
- Comments are now locked, so I can't even tell anyone that I've solved the problem.
It seems like I have 3 options:
- Repost the question, approximately verbatim, as a new question and post my answer to it.
- Hope that someone else sees my undelete/reopen votes and magically agrees without knowing that I solved the problem.
- Request some sort of appeal to the community to get it re-open.
- Flounce off into the sunset and not share my knowledge with the community.
Question:
- A) Are there other options that I've not considered above?
- B) Which option does the community consider best?
- C) Is there anything of note for me to know when I try to implement your recommended option?
Further notes:
Whilst I am interested in specific comments on my question cited above, it would be good to know the general views as well.
I recognise that the people who voted to close almost certainly did so in good faith, and based on a belief that the question had no technical solution. And that they had no particular way to know that the tech solution did exist. I consider myself a moderately skilled programmer and it's taken me about a month of tinkering time to develop a solution, so there's no reason that they would have known a solution exists. ... But now I do. I am specifically claiming that I (now) have better knowledge that the people who voted to close the question.
With regard to the specific
close
reason:
Too broad: There are either too many possible answers, or good answers would be too long for this format. Please add details to narrow the answer set or to isolate an issue that can be answered in a few paragraphs.
"Good Answers would be too long"? Well, I've found the answer, and I know it's not too long to post as an answer.
"Too many possible answers" (Code-based)? If you're only considering technical answers, then evidently not ... No-one else offered ANY answers, and I only found one solution.
"Too many possible answers" (Non-Code-based)? If you're considering work-flow and team-process solutions, then I certainly agree that there are several possible solutions. I might dispute "too many"? But that point is moot since if you were to go down a soft-solution then my post is (as BatteryBackupUnit suggested in the comments) in the wrong stackexchange and should just be migrated.
Furthermore, since it turns out that a Technical solution exists, and the question was asked in a Technical context, I would argue that the existence of non-Technical answers is irrelevant.
reopen-closed
tag. Presumably that is the correct way to implement the "open an Appeal" option? It also suggests that that is a (the?) reasonable approach. – Reinstate Monica --Brondahl-- Jan 6 '18 at 8:05reopen-closed
meta-question tomorrow, but will leave this question in place until then, to get any further general feedback/input – Reinstate Monica --Brondahl-- Jan 6 '18 at 8:23