If you have a title like something + something ๐ญ
you can infer the intent of the question.
OK, what exactly is the intent that should be inferred from such a question?
Are we supposed to infer that you're crying? That you're a person who enjoys crying over their programming problems? That something in the question title made you sad? That the problem is so difficult it made you cry?
And most important of all... why should the reader care about any of that?
Your emotions are of no relevance to the problem you are presenting in your question. That's why we cull out things like "Hi" and "Thanks" and other chatty stuff. It's noise, and we want a site that is free of such clutter and is impersonal.
In 10 years, when someone else has the same problem as you did, they will not care if it made you cry. They care that they can quickly identify that their problem is the same as yours and find a good solution to it. That's all. That's what we're here to create.
Emoticons do not in any way, shape, or form help in creating our easily searchable database of problems and solutions. That is not "subjective".
But there is something which is subjective. This:
MiniCssExtractPlugin.loader + NPM packages + Relative CSS URL paths ๐ญ
This is the original title of the post that started this.
In a comment, you said:
my simple ๐ญwas not simplely my emotions on the matter but rather an indication that the combinations of words I had in my title indicated that they are incompatible by default using far less words to describe the intent of my question.
I certainly didn't take that from your original form of the title. Now, that may be because I personally ignore anything that is not informational content (ie: emojis). But even when I look at the crying emoji, my take-away is not "these things are incompatible". It's more "I'm sad because of these things". Why you are sad is not presented.
What you're not understanding here is that, just because you have an idea in your head of what you want to communicate, does not mean you have successfully communicated it. You believe that the "combination of words" combined with a crying emoji will naturally translate to "these things are incompatible". But that all depends on the thinking of the person who reads them. Thinking which you are not privy to and have limited control over.
Had you used the words "these things are not compatible by default", there would be no question. So long as the reader understood English, they would have an understanding of what you were trying to communicate. Words provide (usually) unambiguous informational content; their meaning is typically objective. Emojis are usually subjective, open to interpretation and thus are not a precise form of communication.
Or to put it another way, it is not the reader's fault that they do not interpret your crying emoji as "these things are not compatible by default"; it is your fault for not communicating that clearly.
We want communication with words on this site. If others want different kinds of communication, there are forums and other more personal sites that they can visit.
If you have a title like something + something ๐ญ you can infer the intent of the question
Wait what? No, not at all. Does that mean "those something's make me cry"? Or rather "one something + one different something that is crying"? Or maybe "that something plus that something is a product that is crying"? This is like super ambiguous, how can it be clear?