"Only a Sith deals in absolutes" isn't only applied to Siths, the human mind has a hard time dealing with stuff that isn't black and white, good or bad, true or false. That's why I like the current help page about "What topics can I ask about here?":
Stack Overflow is for professional and enthusiast programmers, people who write code because they love it. We feel the best Stack Overflow questions have a bit of source code in them, but if your question generally covers…
- 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
The only black and white part of the text is what SO is for: professional and enthusiast programmers, people that love to code.
But I've seen with increasing worry that people (myself included) seems to make broad statements about what is (not) on topic which are, well, absolute.
Is a question about a programming language: on topic. Is a question about dogs: off topic. <Insert your favorite/hated topic>: on/off topic.
I reckon that some allowances/restrictions are necessary for quality control and community control, but more lately than not, these allowances/restrictions has been evolving without minding either quality control or community control.
Get a hard look at the the new tags and the burnination requests, for example, a topic I've grown interest into. Tags are created/removed for topics are which are deemed on/off topic without a clear guidance what should (not) be allowed on the site. I don't feel the criteria these actors which take decisions are even following any guidance, but more like going with the flow, without any critical evaluation, but just doing what we usually do, without minding that maybe what we usually do may not be adequate for the context.
I expect disagreements, as always, but these disagreements are so bland and lacking essence that I can't figure out why are they even discussing the topic so passionately when it seems there's a profound lack of awareness of what the topic is even about. The only impression I've got is that these topics are merely rehashing a known and repeated script, mindlessly keeping the status quo. It is a depressing feeling.
I know I've been very vocal and passionate in certain issues, but I always try to be critical and rational in these issues and the ideas that get thrown around.
When evaluating some topics, I think we have to remember Marc's statement, when talking about HTML and CSS topics:
IMO there is a level of implementation stuff that is development, not design.
I reckon that in some topics there stuff that it is development and stuff that is not development. There are topics that, even when everyone agrees that is development, there will be examples of people asking about non-development issues, and backwards.
There's no topic that is automatically on topic or off topic. There are on and off topic questions about that topic. We can take actions to deter off topic questions and promote on topic ones, but we cannot declare with certainty that all questions of a determined topic are on or off topic.
apple
is off-topic"?