There's this book on low-level optimization of C++ code, and I want to ask whether it's up-to-date (the answer is not entirely obvious).
Is that off-topic/out-of-scope for Stack Overflow, or is it a valid question?
There's this book on low-level optimization of C++ code, and I want to ask whether it's up-to-date (the answer is not entirely obvious).
Is that off-topic/out-of-scope for Stack Overflow, or is it a valid question?
Asking whether a book in its entirety is "out of date" is very broad, as books tend to include lots of stuff. It also gives too much license for people to post a particularly bad excerpt or two and simply declare that, regardless of what else is in the book, the book should be avoided because of how badly it bungles those particular examples. Which, even when it's true (and I myself have said such things in comments on questions about book/tutorial materials), it is pretty opinion-based.
However, it's entirely reasonable to present an example from the book and ask if that particular example is "out of date," so long as there's a fairly concrete definition for that phrase.
Questions on StackOverflow are supposed to have a definitive answer, although there can be multiple different solutions to the same problem.
Judging whether something is "out-of-date" is completely subjective. It's also hard to quantify what portions of the book may be out of date.
Opinion questions are not allowed generally, for example I want to solve problem X, is it better to use Java or Python is not an allowed question because you are asking for an opinion rather than a solution.