So, I thought id throw my hat into the ring here.
I have refrained from making comments thus far or modifying the question until this has progressed through the fiery crucible of meta discussion for which all Stack Overflow foot-soldiers truly share the same rank regardless of what tag, nerd, or angst levels they come from. Additionally, my opinion must be tarred with the obligatory "Its my answer, and confirmation bias" brush
To be honest, I am no angel, and have been suspended multiple times for being “UnKInD”, and downvoted and closed my fair share of the most atrocious questions known to Developer-Kind. Notwithstanding, there is a level at which some questions get closed in a way that might not be optimal to the resource we have all helped to create.
I am not saying the question should be reopened, or that being closed as a typo is unjust, just that, there had to have been something more optimal that could have been done to line the pockets of our grandmasters and overloads, *cough* I mean, better the Q&A resource we all use?
There were some better than average qualities about this question:
- It wasn’t just some kid’ling doing homework and asking for “Gimme Codez” and “Gimme free lunchez”
- The OP had (at least) a basic understanding of the domain, and wrote a coherent question (which is unusual)
- The problem is very common at the intermediate level, and it’s a shame there are no wiki style canonical questions that can be pointed to in C# (or at least I could find)
- Benchmarking questions should be fostered. There are a lot of suspect ways kids (and professionals) are trying to ascertain real world metrics on performance, and as such its done wrong time and time again.
- The OP had gone the effort of making a reproducible example and fiddle to produce the problem (extremely unusual)
There were a lot of suspect qualities about the question:
- The title was not future proof and could have been better in hindsight, though could have be made more appropriate by tag experts (after the fact).
- The OP was making the classic mistake of trying to perform performance benchmarks in a non-optimized environment, using far from optimal tools.
It brings us to some interesting points regardless…
If a user has the ability to code and to lift code from the framework, to ask a question in a way that passes just about every official Stack Overflow Guideline, and was after knowledge of why the results were not (rightly) as they expected, then we have a surface area for what Stack Overflow is about…
Furthermore, by deduction it can be safely assumed the OP had obviously used this site enough to ask a decent question and capable of researching their own problems… after all they had come this far. Then there must be a gap in knowledge that a Q&A site like this should have been able to fill. Marking this as a typo and claiming it as noise, has no benefit to future users..
So, in my honest opinion (it is what it is).
- The question should have been edited (even after the fact) with an appropriate title
- At worst, not closed
- At best, used as a signpost to a canonical well written benchmarking duplicate (that seemingly doesn't exist).
So C# Jedi, call to arms, create canonical wiki benchmarking duplicate.
StringReader
and these may get frustrated to find an answer unrelated to their issue. So you could edit the question to be more about the real issue, but then again, future readers would have to know that their issue was with the benchmarking tool.