This is a follow up of one of the threads in the How does one distinguish typos from coding errors in questions? topic.
Many people there said "One should first read the book on basics and only after that ask questions."
At the same time one of the first rules on SO is not to ask for books and other sources. So, if the area quite a new for the person, what is the way for them to know which book to start with? It is hard to areas where there are only few books and this even harder for a newbie for areas where are tons of books. Any way to handle this on SO? If I am new for some area (let's say, in programming), where can I ask where to get the basics?
I searched a little bit through the SO and the led me to the second part of this question.
The rules for SO (https://stackoverflow.com/help/on-topic) say:
Some questions that fit into one of the categories listed above may be closed by the community because they aren't generally a good fit here or need additional information:
[...]
4. Questions asking us to recommend or find a book, tool, software library, tutorial or other off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it.
How, then the pages like The Definitive C Book Guide and List could survive? Don't get me wrong, I like and fully support the page, the question is "how can survive the page that violates SO rule? And why won't survive my own asking for alike?