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I have a question about my Stack Overflow post: Highlighting the SEND button in MFMessageComposeViewController

I asked a specific question on how to highlight a UI component within a predefined UIViewController in Swift for iOS. I gave background to what I have done, what I have tried, and what I think the solution might be. I then ask how to solve the issue, as I can not find sufficient evidence or code examples in the documentation.

I'm not sure why this is classed as opinion based. The Stack Overflow help page suggests posting here, as I'd rather not have to wait 5+ days for it to enter the re-opening queue after I've edited it (slightly). Can anyone help?

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    Opinion-based is a weird close reason for that question, I agree. However, I think the question is lacking some code that would allow others to reproduce the problem exactly as you are seeing it. That would help to contextualize it, and narrow down the possible solutions. Jun 20, 2021 at 13:20
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    I agree that it is not opinion based. I believe the uncertain tone used in the first revision of your question might have tripped reviewers. Example: "I have looked into the UIAppearance protocol, but the options here seem very limited and do not help." and "Can anyone suggest a solution?". Jun 20, 2021 at 13:26
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    Most people who ask questions are uncertain of the solution. It's concerning if uncertainty in the phrasing used by the asker would trigger people to vote to close those questions as opinion-based, @AbdulAzizBarkat! Jun 20, 2021 at 13:47
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    Two votes for opinion-based; one for "needs details or clarity". I agree that hiding the breakdown is a misfeature. Jun 20, 2021 at 14:05
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    I... have to concur that this is quite bizarre that this got 2 "opinion-based" votes. While I can understand that asking "anyone" might trip it, it's far easier and quicker to reword it into a more proper question like "Is it possible to ..." or "How to ...". The wording is not even worse than "How does anyone do it?" which is more prominent as "opinion-based"...
    – Andrew T.
    Jun 20, 2021 at 14:06
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    the question lacks of focus and should not be opened at all
    – nbk
    Jun 20, 2021 at 15:08
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    @nbk Would you care to tell us what focus it lacks, and what information it would need to have added in order for you to consider reopening it? Jun 20, 2021 at 15:54
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    It's not a debugging question. It's a how-to question. The description of the problem seems adequate to me. Jun 20, 2021 at 16:00
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    There is no code necessary for that question. I'm not an iOS developer (or user), but even I know exactly what they're asking. MFMessageComposeViewController is a well-known, standard component (or whatever terminology they use). From what I know of it, it's possibly a case of there being no real good "official" solution for it – e.g., no explicit public API, but people have found hacks – so maybe those vote reasons were considered the closest to "not really (supposed to be) possible, technically", without having to get into the same old discussion about it again for the umpteenth time.
    – Mike M.
    Jun 20, 2021 at 16:07
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    @nbk: Many "how to" questions aren't valid because they're too trivial or poorly researched. (e.g. the kind of thing that would be assigned as homework for novices.) those kinds of questions always need an attempt. But more interesting questions don't necessarily. Nobody is saying that being a "how to" question without an attempt makes it on topic, just that it doesn't rule out being on topic. Jun 20, 2021 at 20:48
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    Adding some context as someone who does understand the question, there's no need to see the code samples. This is a very minimal class - typical use is new thing(); thing.foo = bar; thing.doYourThing() and there substantial functionality hidden in parent classes (millions of lines of implementation code). The ansewr is "what you're looking for doesn't exist" and that's not documented anywhere it's just general general platform knowledge. Perfectly reasonable question IMHO, and likely someday what he's hoping to do will be possible. I don't see why it should be closed. Jun 20, 2021 at 23:45
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    OK, so the post was re-opened, thanks Guys :), but has now been closed again as it "needs details or clarity". Has someone got a vendetta against me? I can't think how to add details or clarity to the post (that haven't been added either by myself, or the helpful folks who helped tidy up the original). PS this isn't a homework assignment that I can't be bothered to research, it's an app that should have been submitted to the App Store last week and I'm spending my weekend trying to respond to the concerns of some non-tech-savvy testers (who are my target customers!)
    – JonH
    Jun 21, 2021 at 0:00
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    @JonH nah, your post just got in the crossfire of two groups with different views on whether to use "lack of visible research" when considering question closure, don't sweat it too much. Personally, I don't find it problematic, and it's quite clear, but others may disagree. Note that there are limits in place to prevent abuse so those who acted on the post once cannot recast their votes - your post was closed by 3 different users (check the timeline). Jun 21, 2021 at 0:29
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    @MikeM. "no explicit public API, but people have found hacks" - you're completely right. Apple's built-in alerts, mail composers, share sheets, etc are notoriously hard to customize. It's probably to maintain a standard across the entire platform though.
    – aheze
    Jun 21, 2021 at 1:53
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    @FelipeAlamedaA Just because someone typed text into the question box doesn't automatically make it a Q that should have an A on Stack Overflow. This is supposed to be a Q&A site, not a help-desk. Jun 22, 2021 at 10:33

2 Answers 2

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When voting to close a question, you are presented with a list of options to choose from as the reason for closing. These options aren't always a good fit to the voter's actual reason. Furthermore, some of the options are "hidden" behind a menu system where you must first select one choice and then select another. The layout and content of the reasons has changed many times over the years. In short, it is not a very user friendly system.

Either for that reason, or out of laziness, many people will select a reason which doesn't accurately reflect the reality. Subsequent voters will see the choice made by previous voters and will often just choose that - either (again) out of laziness or from an assumption that the first voter got it right.

In your case, as suggested in the comments, the question was closed for the wrong reason.

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    So your anwers boils down to "People want to close questions, and if they can't find a valid reason to do so, they'll click a random one"?
    – CodeCaster
    Jun 21, 2021 at 11:45
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    @CodeCaster That has often (but not always) been my experience. I frequently encounter closed question which legitimately ought to be closed but for which the reason for the closure is clearly wrong.
    – JBentley
    Jun 21, 2021 at 11:52
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    The other problem is that the reported close reason assumes unanimity between the votes. Sometimes, I'll vote to close a question with Reason A but the other two people think Reason B is right, and it gets reported as if I agree with them when (quite often) I don't. Jun 21, 2021 at 17:42
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    And if all 3 closers choose different reasons, just one of them will be shown, so 2 out of 3 closers are incorrectly claimed to have closed for that reason.
    – Barmar
    Jun 21, 2021 at 20:07
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    @Barmar Actually, if all 3 users use a different reason, I'm pretty sure the banner shows a generic "not on-topic as described in the help-center" reason. Not that this is particularly better or anything, just thought I'd mention it. It also doesn't apply to dupe closures IIRC; the duplicate wins even if it's the only vote cast for it.
    – cigien
    Jun 21, 2021 at 21:06
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    I'm assuming this answer is simply descriptive, rather than prescriptive, but I'll note here anyway: this is doing it wrong. You, as a close-voter, are responsible for the actual reason that you choose. If you're too lazy to click the right reason, then stop voting. If you can't find a reason that matches, then don't close the question. That's a clue it shouldn't be closed. Downvote it instead. Jun 22, 2021 at 7:27
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    In my experience the "opinion based" is the most problematic option. It almost seems that people voting closing select this because the question should be closed in their opinion (that is, they misunderstand what this option is supposed to do). In addition, I would set the bar much higher for closing "opinion based" because some questions do not have a clear winner but maybe 2 or 3 possible solutions. Closing the whole question because there cannot be a clear winner solution seems worse than having a question with 2-3 possible options even if selection between those were opinion based. Jun 22, 2021 at 8:51
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    Maybe instead of closing a question for being "opinion based", just show a warning about it being opinion based? That way question could have multiple different answers and community could still vote which is the best solution even if none of the options are great or can solve the problem as a whole. Maybe require 100+ reputation to answer opinion based question? Jun 22, 2021 at 8:56
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    @MikkoRantalainen opinion based is when people are soliciting opinion, if the question can only be answered with opinions not based on anything concrete/objective. It's not that hard. The thing is that people pick anything, rather than defaulting to unclear.
    – Braiam
    Jun 22, 2021 at 11:39
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    @MikkoRantalainen All close votes are cast based on the opinion of the close voter. Same for every other type of vote. Only a small percentage of questions on Stack Overflow have only one correct answer; having multiple possible correct answers is not what "opinion-based" means.
    – TylerH
    Jun 22, 2021 at 14:05
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    @MikkoRantalainen "However, many people casting close votes seem to think that if the question doesn't have one clear solution it's opinion based and they will case close vote with that reasoning." Citation needed. Your example that follows is still opinion-based; besides, whether "security vulnerability Z" is even a concern is a matter of opinion, depending on who is reading the question and what their personal threat matrix is. Such questions need to be provide objective metrics. It's fairly uncommon that a question can use the word "better" and still be on-topic.
    – TylerH
    Jun 22, 2021 at 14:46
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    I agree that "Which one is better, X or Y" and "X because Y causes security vulnerability Z" is an opinion based question and answer. For that not to be the case, the answer should not start with "X because". E.g. the question could be "Which security vulnerabilities are known to exist in Y but not in X?" in which case a similar, non-opinion based answer could be given (but the question might still be liable to be closed for other reasons e.g. being too broad).
    – JBentley
    Jun 22, 2021 at 15:33
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    This answer depicts the sad reality of the close vote community that has been built here.
    – Travis J
    Jun 22, 2021 at 17:51
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    However, in my experience, Meta disagrees whether or not a close reason can substitute for an answer. I can only say that I don't think it can. If we can be picky about whether content should be a question, answer or comment - we can afford to be picky about whether a close reason should've been an answer instead.
    – BoltClock
    Jun 23, 2021 at 4:12
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    @Ian Kemp: Not all close voters understand the close reasons, or worse, use their votes responsibly. Many just want to see problematic questions closed, whatever it takes. See also dupehammer abuse. I don't know about robo-reviewers (though there are users here who only process the close/reopen queues on Meta Stack Overflow and do nothing else on the entire network), but I still want to blame the review badges for encouraging people who are not competent reviewers, to participate in review.
    – BoltClock
    Jun 23, 2021 at 4:15
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The question consists of two questions, i.e.

  1. How do I highlight the send button ...

and

  1. ... or access the button so that I can draw the user's attention to it?

While part 1 is not opinion based, part 2 seems to be. How a UI should be made to make the user focus on specific items are not something that we all can/will agree on. So I don't think it's completely wrong to close as "opinion based".

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    They're not asking "what is your favorite way to draw the user's attention to buttons". That would be opinion-based.
    – CodeCaster
    Jun 21, 2021 at 11:44
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    @CodeCaster To me it's also opinion based to ask "How do I draw the users attention to UI item X". Person X may think solution A is good while person Y may prefer solution B. Jun 21, 2021 at 11:48
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    No, "how to" is not opinion-based. I want to whack people in the face over the Internet who answer "How to parse CSV?" with "Use string.Split(',')", but that doesn't make the question opinion-based.
    – CodeCaster
    Jun 21, 2021 at 11:52
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    In other words, reading between the lines instead of parsing the question's words like a lexer, OP is asking "How can I show the Send button to users instead of having it hidden by default, requiring them to take action to be able to click it". They are not asking about answerer's favorite way of showing buttons, be it blinking them, rendering arrows, dimming the rest of the screen or whatever. They are asking about any solution.
    – CodeCaster
    Jun 21, 2021 at 11:54
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    So "How to make a good looking UI" isn't opinion based to you? Jun 21, 2021 at 11:57
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    Not the part you bolded is; the "good looking" part makes it so.
    – CodeCaster
    Jun 21, 2021 at 12:01
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    @CodeCaster "... be it blinking them, rendering arrows, dimming the rest of the screen.." Well, animated unicorns walking towards the send button would be the only solution (IMO of course) Jun 21, 2021 at 12:22
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    You're misunderstanding the question. They don't really care right now about the highlighting itself. They basically just want to know how to access a button in a system/external dialog.
    – Mike M.
    Jun 21, 2021 at 13:23
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    ...No. The OP is clearly asking "How do I highlight the send button [in order to] draw the user's attention to it?" That's most certainly a single question, with a single stated task for a given purpose, not two open ended questions. You've misinterpreted their request.
    – zcoop98
    Jun 21, 2021 at 14:02
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    The original question said "Can anyone suggest a solution to highlight the send button within the MFMessageComposeViewController, or access the button so that I can draw the user's attention to it?" Notice here that the "How do I" was edited in by me.
    – Braiam
    Jun 21, 2021 at 15:11
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    "You're misunderstanding the question." "You've misinterpreted their request" Sounds like the person who voted "Needs clarity" was close to the mark... Jun 21, 2021 at 17:03
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    It seems pretty clear to me the request was: "How can I do 1, or (2) if that can't be done, are there any other solutions that closely approximate 1?"
    – Cole
    Jun 21, 2021 at 23:22
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    @4386427 To clarify why I still disagree; Even though you may be able to split "How do I do A or B to get C?" into two questions, both variants of "How do I do [A/B] to get C?" are still, at their core, about getting C. My assumption is that OP doesn't really care about knowing both A and B, and instead just wants to know how to get C, which is (likely) answerable, and on-topic. I don't think this assumption is a stretch in most cases.
    – zcoop98
    Jun 22, 2021 at 20:27
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    @4386427 The question isn't "how should I draw attention to it", it's "how can I access the button (so that I can modify it)". "How can I access the button" is perfectly reasonable and not opinion based (you can run the code and see if you accessed the button or not, end of story). Jun 22, 2021 at 20:58
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    I think others have mentioned this example as well, but: having multiple ways to do a task doesn't automatically mean it is opinion-based. I'm guessing what people disagree with is whether "drawing users' attention to the Send button" is an objective metric or not. To me it's objective enough to not consider it opinion-based. But I can see how others might consider it very subjective.
    – justhalf
    Jun 23, 2021 at 12:34

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