I made this question a time ago, and it happened to be an open issue of Visual Studio. Yesterday, such issue was marked as Won't fix. Should I close the question or keep it open in the case someone someday provide a workaround (after a year and a half this question has had very low impact)?
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I would argue that your question is better suited for superuser.com anyways. I had a question similar in nature about Adobe Reader which has proven to be useful for years.– MonkeyZeusNov 30, 2018 at 15:42
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@MonkeyZeus thanks! I was dubious about where to post it... as I've found many questions related to developer tools in SO, I thought it would be the correct place (though superuser.com probably would have been good too).– cbuchartNov 30, 2018 at 15:45
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There's quite a bit of overlap and on-topic questions of years past can easily be considered off-topic nowadays due to the myriad of specialized SE sites so it can be confusing. Notepad++ is a developer tool too but I chose to post my question on Super User superuser.com/q/1274554/259665 and it seemed well received. I don't feel too strongly about where your question should go but Super User answers tend to garner more hacky answers I feel.– MonkeyZeusNov 30, 2018 at 15:51
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@MonkeyZeus OK, thanks for the explanation... do you think it worth publishing it there now that it has been marked as "won't fix" anyway?– cbuchartNov 30, 2018 at 15:54
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1That's really up to you; you can flag your question for moderator attention and request for it's migration. The question seems on-topic for both sites per the existing tags: stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/visual-studio-2017 and superuser.com/questions/tagged/visual-studio-2017. I'd recommend reading through some of those posts and if you think Super User has a better audience for your tool then it's your call :)– MonkeyZeusNov 30, 2018 at 15:59
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It isn't actually a true "won't fix" case, they just refused to look at it. Which is somewhat understandable, it works just fine on my 15.5.6 install. There's another detail that matters that isn't visible, I suspect it might have something to do with the selected UI language. This does have a knack for being found back some sunny day by someone that figured out the detail. Be sure to supply some more, like living in Spain.– Hans PassantNov 30, 2018 at 16:05
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It certainly is appropriate for Super User, but you are also right that it's a developer tool and thus explicitly on topic here on SO. I'd wager a guess that the Super User users are more likely to be more ready to answer a question like this had it been answerable, but it's not off topic here.– Davy MNov 30, 2018 at 17:42
1 Answer
There is no close reason for, "There is no solution to this problem". That's an answer to the question, not a close reason. If it's impossible to do what a question asks, then an answer explaining why it's impossible is an answer. If it's impossible because there's a bug, then explaining the documented bug, and stating that the official statement is that it won't be fixed is an answer.
Providing alternate solutions to the underlying problem using a different approach would of course also be a valid answer to the question. Whether or not it's a useful alternative would be determined by votes on it.