I am perfectly okay with questions like these. They are on-topic as long as they are obviously programming-related. In other words, they need to be asking about terms used in source code, language definitions/specifications, and/or development environments. Like many of the examples in your question, or this one about Win32 resource scripts.
Just because it's incidentally found in a commit message or part of general "hacker speak" doesn't make it programming-related, though. This unfortunately has to be decided on a case-by-case basis.
There is a persistent undercurrent of thought that attempts to transform Stack Overflow into a debugging service, where the only on-topic question would present source code and ask for someone to debug that code. Resist this urge. While such questions are also on-topic (as long as they contain a minimal, complete, and verifiable example), they're also the least interesting and least generally-useful questions that can possibly be imagined, so we certainly don't want to restrict the site's scope to only handling these questions.
Our charter is to build a library of high-quality answers to the long tail of programming-related questions. We naturally have to exclude questions that are unanswerable in our format, even if they are about programming, such as polls or primarily opinion-based questions that don't have a verifiable answer. For practical reasons, we have also learned that "recommendation" questions should be discouraged, because they tend to lead to spam and low-quality answers. Definition questions, however, do not fall into either of these categories. They are narrowly focused and have verifiable answers.
Note that naming questions—what should I call my function that does x?—are off-topic because they are primarily opinion-based and there is no objective answer.