Closing good questions which have useful answers and apply to many developers for being "opinion-based" or "too broad" is one of the huge problems I have with Stack Overflow in general. It unnecessarily prevents developers from learning from each other in ways that are otherwise impossible--especially for isolated developers.
Here's one potential example: "What are the pros and cons of Unity vs Unreal Engine?" Allowing this question to remain and be answered gleans expert knowledge from real, professional users of each and helps people make informed decisions. It helps the community immensely to gain these insights from real users! I've answered and asked many questions with some aspect of opinion in them, and I want the opinion-part included and answered, because it helps me and others and combines experience.
Many questions which are closed widely benefit the community. See this search result for Stack Overflow questions which are closed: https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=closed%3A1.
- The very first one has 5426 upvotes with 12 answers, the highest of which has 3816 upvotes, yet it is closed for needing to be "more focused". I'm pretty sure a question with 5426 upvotes and and answer with 3816 is focused enough.
- The next one: 4513 upvotes on the question, 7177 on the main answer, yet it is apparently also not "focused" enough.
- This one, closed for being "opinion-based" has 2407 upvotes on the question, with 1635 on the answer.
- This one is requesting information on industry "best practices", from fellow developers, yet it "needs to be more focused"--this is an alias for "closed because it contains opinions."
All of these questions are closed when their upvotes very clearly yell that they do greatly benefit the community, and thousands more which could greatly benefit the community are closed before they even get the chance to begin gaining traction.
I vote we allow "opinion-based" questions on the site which either:
- expose constructive discussion on pros and cons of different techniques, as this helps us all as developers in our decision-making processes, OR:
- expose industry best practices, as this helps us identify patterns which are more-widely-accepted, more-widely-understood by others, and more-likely to be successful, OR:
- provides a useful list of tools or approaches to begin solving a problem, as this is immensely helpful as well
I'd like to stop seeing good questions closed--especially those which are widely-upvoted and have a strong answer base, purely for being "opinion-based".
Personally, I hypothesize that many people with closing power follow Stack Overflow's policy of closing opinion-based questions because they simply believe Stack Overflow got it right and they want to be helpful. The new generations of developers went to school (ALL of their college) after Stack Overflow had already been founded and gained an industry-wide foothold as the place to ask software development questions. This means that when this new generation got their jobs, they likely already knew that Stack Overflow was the industry standard, and believed that Stack Overflow is good, Stack Overflow does what should be done for sites like these because it is so successful, and Stack Overflow doesn't allow opinion-based questions, so that's how it should be. These new generations are trained from the beginning to see through a certain lens. Perhaps they learned to begin downvoting and closing questions which are "opinion-based" simply because that's what they see done all the time and that's what they see repeated they are "supposed" to do. They may not look as deeply as they should at questions and answers based on their merit, usefulness, correctness, and community contribution, and instead simply start scanning them to quickly identify if they might be "opinion-based". They then get a false sense of "helping" and accomplishment by closing these "opinion-based" questions. They think they are making the site "better" because this is what the main answerers want.
This is the status quo Stack Overflow has created. I challenge it because I think it is a mistake.