I get asked this question from time to time. It happened today. I don't know how to answer it, but I responded to a comment to please the user who seems to have found "some" workarounds but still wants me to explain why I need it and what it helps.
Sometimes I can't answer that. This is because I don't have the use case before-hand, but I still want to tackle the problem. This is exactly like Pure Mathematics, and in Pure Mathematics, you don't know a use case in advance, but you could discover a use case in future.
I generalize most of questions I ask, rather than being specific to my problem.
If I had become specific, I might not get a straight answer, but rather a duck tape type one, and other people in the future who might have the same question might not find the answer if I had become specific.
How do I respond to these type comments if I don't have a use case before-hand?
Link to that comment and the question
I had to post a full use case today due to the pressure. The community believes there are better alternatives, even when I added the wording "Runtime optimization". I have many years of experience and I have added this wording with responsibility and I am not throwing words out of my mouth just because I think so.
On 3/1/2021,
@TheVee answered my question. His answer is sheer black magic that amazed me. It is a pity that the question is closed. He had to answer the question via comments.