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I don't understand why a site this big, whose job is to help programmers who are in trouble, doesn't allow anyone to ask questions about a recommended book. I asked about three times about a recommended book about several different APIs, and all my questions were closed in less than a day, and even my last question was closed in less than half a minute. I think it is a bad policy not to let anyone ask questions about a suggested book. Why does Stack Overflow have such a law?

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  • 4
    How does a book suggestion help programmers who are in trouble?
    – Dharman Mod
    Mar 3 at 9:31
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    Specifically the reasoning is set out in this answer.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Mar 3 at 9:33
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    "whose job is to help programmers who are in trouble" You might want to revisit the tour again. Mar 3 at 9:35
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    "whose job is to help programmers who are in trouble" That's not the job of this site. The job of this site is, as laid out in the tour, to create a searchable encyclopedia of high-quality answers to specific questions about programming. "I asked about three times" Why would you keep trying to do something three times? Wasn't it a sufficient hint that it was closed the first (or first and second) time(s)? "Yenfer" Who is Yenfer?
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Mar 3 at 9:36
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    "I asked about three times about a recommended book about several different APIs, and all my questions were closed in less than a day" - it sounds like didn't bother reading the close reasons the first two times then. Either that, or you were deliberately going against rules you knew about, and so really should have expected the questions to be closed.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 3 at 9:58
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    @JonSkeet No, I didn't mean to ask the same question multiple times, I meant to ask several separate questions and they were all closed in less than a day. Mar 3 at 10:00
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    I never suggested you asked the same question multiple times. I'm suggesting you violated the same policy multiple times, and I'd expect the close reason on each of those to alert you to the policy if you hadn't been aware of it before. Asking one question asking for a recommendation for a book for API X and being told "Stack Overflow doesn't welcome questions for recommendations" should have been enough information for you to realise that a question asking for a recommendation for a book for API Y would also be unwelcome.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 3 at 10:03
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    @JonSkeet Oh, so with these things that you and others have said, where should I ask about a suggested book? Because I personally did not find any good books that are both complete and suitable for beginners. Thank you if you answer. Mar 3 at 10:24
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    Not here, basically. I'm not going to go hunting for good recommendation sites for you - that's research you should do for yourself, including when you think you might have found somewhere, checking that the question will actually be on topic.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 3 at 10:26
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    I mean I would love discussions about and recommendations for books because so many of them are utter tripe nowadays, but Stack Overflow is not the tool for that job. It is even specifically against the rules. Several rules, actually.
    – Gimby
    Mar 3 at 10:35
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    @TheParhamDev Reddit is good... for banter. Some subreddits are more reliable than others, it all depends on what type of person the subreddit attracts. If you would go to a generic programming subreddit for discussing books, I think you'll just be opening yourself up to a pretty wide range of very strong opinions. Usefulness not guaranteed, but I'm sure it'll be fun to have fist fights over which author is evil incarnate in the opinion of some and a saint in the opinion of others.
    – Gimby
    Mar 3 at 10:59
  • I don't know what you are looking for, but there are actually a few community wiki entries regarding books etc., e.g. here. Might be worth checking out.
    – Timus
    Mar 3 at 12:54
  • Don't know if I would recommend any of the web options in the list I composed there, book recommendations are probably best discussed with people you know for sure are not just making things up as they go along. I'd probably even recommend Stack Overflow chat rooms over any other site since you can have a pretty good idea where specific people on Stack Overflow are coming from based on their answering history or meta posts.
    – Gimby
    Mar 7 at 10:32

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