I've always been reluctant to ask questions where the answer might be just "no", or "this is not possible". For good reasons. Such questions seem to be received poorly. Also, answers that basically say "no, this is not possible" are not well received, in many cases.
- Why?
- Is it really fair if the answer to a question is important in deciding whether it is off-topic? The person who asks it does not know the answer, so they don't have a way to know beforehand if their question is on-topic or not.
- Does this mean that "is X possible?" questions are always bad?
- Can we have a "this question is off-topic because it can be answered with 'no, that is not possible'" close reason? (sorry for the sarcasm.)
For me this is really an unwelcoming part of Stack Overflow, and I would like to discuss this with the community. Please note that if the answer to that question were "Yes this is possible, just use CallKit.endCurrentCellularCall()
, see the docs here", it wouldn't have been downvoted and it wouldn't have received two close-votes.
Why am I asking? Because of iOS: Is it possible to Programatically disconnect a call?. It received 6 downvotes, and I have no idea why. It received 2 close votes before I answered it. After I answered it, it received no more close votes. The close-vote-explanation for "too broad" says "Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer." - Well, the question is very specific and it had enough detail for me to answer it. I don't even see which details could be added to the question to make it easier to answer. It's one of those questions where either you know the answer or you don't know it. There is no ambiguity in the question, and the answer is very straightforward.
One person told me in a comment that I shouldn't answer questions which should "clearly be closed as too broad". I asked why they are off-topic and got no response. Please explain to me why they are off-topic, because for me it is not clear at all.