Disclaimer: I had no involvement in the actions taken on your question, but it's very obvious to me that these actions were unquestionably correct.
This was edited out by a user who judged it to be "snark/meta-commentary"
Because it was.
when they completely ignored the question
Yes, because it is inappropriate to put such a question on the main site.
You have been using Stack Overflow for more than 7 years, and a few other Stack Exchange network sites for as long or nearly as long. You also have a "Fanatic" gold badge for 100 consecutive daily visits, and have asked dozens of questions on Stack Overflow and answered more than a dozen questions.
You should therefore be expected to understand, by now, at least the basics of how the sites work: such as the fact that this is not a discussion forum; your question is therefore expected to contain only an on-topic question, and you may not expect to have a back-and-forth with other users via the actual question or answer posts. That's why there are separate meta sites (and comments, and chat).
On the other hand, you weren't, apparently, around in the days when questions like this would have been considered on topic (for example, because the other technical computer-user sites didn't exist yet). So it rings hollow for you to appeal to "the early days of StackOverflow" in making your appeal.
"where should I be asking this question?"
Right here is where you ask "where should I be asking this question?". Or else you can try the network-wide meta to find the right site.
For the actual question: it's hard to follow what you are trying to ask. It doesn't seem like the question has anything to do with git bash
, or scp
, at all. It seems like you are really asking a question about how to use the grep
command.
That most likely belongs on Super User; you could try Unix and Linux since grep
is fundamentally a Unix command and I don't think using Git Bash changes anything relevant.
However, based on how things played out, it comes across that you either simply had a typo, or didn't understand something about the specific flavour of regex syntax that grep
uses. That would most likely get your question closed in the places where it's on topic - either as a typo, or a duplicate (maybe something like "how do I match digit symbols with grep
?", or something to do with the difference between regex and glob syntax).
Consequently, my question was closed as "Not suitable for this site" because my question about where I should post it was no longer visible!
No. It was closed as not suitable for the site because it is not suitable for the site. Asking why it is not suitable for the site doesn't change the fact that it isn't suitable for the site.
In fact, it makes matters worse, in three separate ways:
It adds a second unrelated question, which is not how the site works and makes "Needs More Focus" a valid close reason.
It poses a meta question, which is off topic on every main site and should be asked on a corresponding meta site instead.
It suggests that you know that all of this is a problem, yet chose to post anyway. This sort of thing tends to make people unsympathetic towards you.
Further, now you've come here to complain (and, originally, call people out by name) - which suggests that you also knew that Meta sites exist and that they're the appropriate place to ask meta questions. So at this point, it's really impossible for me to side with you in any way, shape or form.
Now, because my original question has been closed, I cannot expect to get any answers or suggestions
Yes, that's how the site works. You are not actually entitled to answers even on properly asked questions, but especially not on off-topic, unclear ones. Again, this is not a discussion forum; and people are therefore explicitly expected not to provide answers in the answer section simply because they know how to solve the problem you describe, but only because they can help to build a searchable Q&A reference library.
and after all the years I've been participating in it, Stack Overflow has become effectively useless to me.
Really?
Have you ever tried putting something like site:stackoverflow.com <words that describe the issue>
into a search engine? For example, with the current issue I can turn up a few at least vaguely related things. If I tried it with a site where the question is (currently) on topic, and with a few more details, I might even be able to find a proper duplicate.
That's how Stack Exchange sites are intended to be useful, and why they (especially the more technical ones like Stack Overflow) have the policies that they do. Because when people don't ask questions properly, the resulting mess makes search results worse.
grep
tag guidance is clear: "Use this tag only if your question relates to programming using grep or grep-based APIs. Questions relating to using or troubleshooting grep command-line options itself are off-topic."