I personally do not work with many command line toolkits; very few. dcmtk is one of them.
DCMTK is popular toolkit for DICOM and widely used. Many are using this in programming as well; like executing an external process from main application and capturing the output and then updating the main application UI. Linux or Java based programmers use this more. Many medical equipment are developed using this toolkit.
Being command line toolkit, it can also be used standalone, without involvement of any programming language. Many users of this toolkit are also using it this way.
Major reasons for asking question:
- User asks for command.
- User knows the command but asks for parameters.
- User knows the parameters also but those are incorrect. Command does not work as intended.
- DICOM environment related issue. In this case dicom also present most of the time. Issue can be covered under DICOM tag only; toolkit tag not needed.
- Purely DICOM related issue. This fully comes under dicom alone; DCMTK is not needed. User mentions it just because he is using that toolkit.
It may happen that user is actually using the tool through program - face some problem - executes same command through command prompt; problem persists - conclude that problem is with command syntax.
In this case, mentioning the development language is not needed and not useful; it is not a problem. As a part of creating MCVE, user put the minimal part that recreates an issue.
Is it on-topic to ask a question about command line toolkit used in development?
If it is not; then dcmtk does not make sense.