I’ve posted a question “Altering the state of a composed class by its composing classes. Is there any rule or principle for not doing so?” which people seem to find as an opinion-based question and decided to have it closed. I tried to improve the formulation such that it assumes that I would think that there might be a rule or a principle which I may not have discovered yet. Somebody who may have the knowledge about such a rule or principle would answer or somebody who dealt with this kind of situations would offer me reasons why not to adopt this approach, if the case suggest so.
I have received some downvotes after editing the question that way, but I don’t understand why. I assume that I may need some better understanding on what opinion-based actually means, because for me it’s quite vague and arbitrary.
My Reasoning
Take the following question as an example: “When should I use GC.SurpressFinalize()?”. Why is this question not opinion-based?
I assume because there is a documentation on which people can do research and find the “correct” answer. What if some people with different opinions write some articles related to this topic? The question responders would use them as a base for their answers. Wouldn’t this increase the range of “opinion-based” answers?
If there would be no such documentation, would that make the question opinion-based? If the inquirer knows that there is a documentation, why wouldn’t they search for it by themselves?
So, they placed the question because they assumed that there might be a documentation with the “correct” answer.
Why is my question different in terms of “opinion-based” classification?
Updates
This "Why is "Is this correct?" an off-topic question, and what should I ask instead?" doesn't answer the question because the discussion suggests that I should do testing whether the code works or not. The code works in both cases. My assumption was that one of the approaches could be standard while the other just a bad decision that I should later return to fix.