The question wasn't too broad: Does <technology>
use <optimization>
? Is what it boils down to. It either does or it doesn't. No one would be tempted to turn their answer into a book.
The question isn't based on 'opinion'.
The question is answerable, especially since ReferenceSource is available.
The question wasn't asking for an off-site resource. You weren't asking someone to provide you with a library, website, or book that does "X", you were asking if "X" exists in technology "Y", that we all happen to use because we're programmers.
The hangup people (probably) had with the question was that it wasn't based on an actual problem you face, rather it is a question you're asking because you're curious.
You know, like this one, that was inhabiting the Hot Network Questions list for most of this morning.
Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending on your point of view) there is no close reason for "This is a curiousity I have but I haven't actually tried to do in the wild", and so sometimes questions get closed for reasons that don't make sense. This is one of those unwritten 'rules' of Stack Overflow, that may or may not get enforced depending on how interesting the question is.