I failed an audit that was asking about software support for Xcode by leaving a comment.
Why is a software support question appropriate for Stack Overflow and not an Xcode-related subreddit?
I failed an audit that was asking about software support for Xcode by leaving a comment.
Why is a software support question appropriate for Stack Overflow and not an Xcode-related subreddit?
It's very well known that if you up your phone to a version of iOS that your version of Xcode doesn't support, then if you try to build to that phone from that copy of Xcode, you'll get this mysterious alert about the iPhone not being available. That alert wording has been there for years. And the larger fact — that an older version of Xcode doesn't magically support a newer version of iOS — has always been the case.
The correct procedure is: don't do that. Don't update your development phone's iOS version until there is a version of Xcode that does support that version of iOS. There is usually, at the least, a beta of Xcode that meets that requirement. Currently, there is a release version of Xcode meets the OP's stated requirement.
From an SO point of view, the trouble is that the same question keeps getting asked again and again — not just iPhone is not available. Please reconnect the device. / iOS 14.2 - Xcode 12.1 but also, say, Could not locate device support files, iPhone is not available. Xcode 12 — and some people are taking advantage of this to give the same answer over and over again, e.g. https://stackoverflow.com/a/64737156/341994 and https://stackoverflow.com/a/64854525/341994 (they are almost word for word the same answer).
So in my view this is a bad situation on Stack Overflow and the question should be penalized in some way.
Questions about using IDEs are on-topic, including questions about Xcode. That the community broadly takes this view is evidenced by the xcode tag existing and having 147k questions, many with large numbers of upvotes. It's also corroborated by the wording in the help center:
if your question generally covers…
- ..., or
- ..., or
- software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
- a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development
…then you’re in the right place to ask your question!
That by itself doesn't necessarily truly make it "high quality", of course, but your specific reason for objecting to it isn't a good one.
As for why this question was selected as an audit, that'll be because it was highly upvoted and had no downvotes - though it seems that it's now received a couple of downvotes due to the meta effect, so won't be used as an audit again.
Finally, for what it's worth, the question does seem genuinely good to me. There are maybe some minor nits to pick - I see one typo, for instance - but it clearly articulates the problem (the asker gets the quoted error message every time they try to run their app on a device) and what triggered the problem to appear (upgrading iOS to 14.2 on their device). What's more, it's evidently a common problem, since there are 4000 views and 29 upvotes - all in less than 3 weeks. And finally, it has clear answers, explaining the cause (the latest version of Xcode doesn't yet support the latest version of iOS) and providing a workaround (installing a community-written patch for Xcode to add support for iOS 14.2).
All of that plainly seems like good content to me; we've got useful answers here to a programming problem that has affected many readers. Why wouldn't we want it here?