Can anyone in this group guaranty that their answer is 100% correct? If not, then Why is the “opinion-based” questions is banned from this group?
A correct answer does not equate to a good/strong opinion, just as an incorrect answer does not equate to a bad/weak opinion.
Let's take a look at the close vote text:
Opinion-based
This question is likely to be answered with opinions rather than facts and citations. It should be updated so it will lead to fact-based answers.
"This question is likely to be answered with opinions rather than facts and citations". Note, this part has nothing to do with how "good" or "useful" the question is, but rather the types of answers it will attract. I have seen many users struggle to understand this concept. That, because Stack Overflow is looking for a specific answer, the question needs to be constructed in a particular way.
To quote Good Subjective, Bad Subjective:
"We never claimed that subjective questions were horrible abominations that should never be asked. We simply choose to forego those subjective discussions, as there were dozens upon dozens of forums which already catered to them."
What is this specific answer Stack Overflow is looking for?
I think the clearest indicator of the type answer that Stack Overflow is looking for is the fact that each question as a single accepted answer.
Let's take a hypothetical question (that will also be hypothetically answered):
What is the best programming language?
Expert C++ user comes by and answers:
C++ of course. Look at all the things you can do with it!
Expert python user answers:
Python naturally. Look at all these cool things!
The question is which of these is the answer?
In addition, now we have several users over the years who contribute:
- Is it easy to tell which language does what?
- How do we determine how "useful" the answer is to upvote or downvote it?
- Is there a larger Python or C++ community who will confidently upvote one language more than the other?
- How easy is it to tell which answers are still relevant after 5 years? Do the concepts mentioned still apply?
As a future reader coming across the question:
- Do you know which answer best applies to your situation?
- Do you know which answer is best or has there been bias leading to oddly distributed votes?
Let's look at a different hypothetical question:
How do I add variables a
and b
in Python?
Answer 1:
a + b
Answer 2:
a - -b
Answer 3:
a - b
Which of these is the answer? Answers 1 and 2 both produce the correct results but 2 has a redundant step. Answer 3 is wrong as it produces incorrect output. While no one can "guarantee that their answer is 100% correct", we can rate and accept questions on their merit. We can run timing and spacial analysis on the programs and use this to determine the correct answer.
What if people is looking for a suggestion or recommendation solutions for their problems?
What is the point if people could not ask questions when they need help?
People absolutely can ask questions when they need help, but we may not be able to answer the question on Stack Overflow. Stack Overflow certainly can provide suggestions or recommend solutions, but only in constraints of this platform. There are many other sites which are specifically for discussion and they can be awesome resources as well.
A hammer is not the best tool for writing a letter. Choosing the correct tool for the job is super important. Asking this type of question on SO is simply the wrong tool choice.
I thought anyone could ask questions and contribute back to the community by answer other people’s questions (if they can), then other experts will determine the answer is correct or not. If you do not like the questions or not sure how to answer, then you can skip them. The questions could be removed after a certain time without any answer or vote. Why blocking them at first place?
Roomba actually already does this. However, I think the closure reason has been missed. The concern with opinion based questions is not that it will not be answered, but rather that it will.
Again the above hypothetical opinion question may attract 100s of answers covering many different languages. Leading to significant clutter and confusion. We're closing the question to prevent the question being answered.
other experts will determine the answer is correct or not
This is also an issue with opinion-based answers. Who is an expert on an opinion? Every tool has pros and cons and they cannot all be compared equally.
In the hypothetical, the number of people who are an "expert" in all of the 100s of answers received are few (if one exists at all). Which will likely lead to users supporting the answers they understand. Which again leads to the issues outlined above.