I recently asked a question which I believe covers all the suggestions on How do I ask to ask:
Write a title that summarizes the specific problem
The question's title includes all the information required to answer the question.
Introduce the problem before you post any code
Yes, I explain the problem and then introduce an example.
Help others reproduce the problem
The code presented is enough to reproduce the problem as it doesn't derive a parser.
Include all relevant tags
This is a question about automatically generating a parser for an arbitrary datatype in Rust. I've included the tags: parsing
, generics
, rust
, algebraic-data-types
.
Proof-read before posting!
I did. The question looks brief and understandable.
Look for help asking for help
I spent the previous 10 minutes googling for a solution and found none.
Moreover, the question is objective and has a clear, short, well-defined answer (either the answer is "yes, by doing X" or "no, that's not possible"). It was put on hold for being too broad, which, to me, do not make any sense in this context. What is the reasoning behind that decision?
Read
in Haskell does. (MaiaVictor: Perhaps it would be worth it to explain that a little further in the question.)X
times higher than the time it takes for someone else to answer it, then it is reasonable to ask, under a "this is productive for the open-source community" sense. The answer you linked makes sense in a more individualistic view, i.e., if you believe that "answering a question produces value to the one asking, and produces costs to the one answering, who will not get anything in return". I realize now the second view is the most widespread.