Very often when I come across a question post that has _any_ sort of connection to a coding challenge site such as leetcode, hackerrank, etc., such as being about a problem on that site, or even if the question is about how the site builds/runs code, I will see a comment or multiple comments saying that coding challenges are not a good way to learn, and sometimes also suggesting some other learning strategy. For example, in https://stackoverflow.com/q/78643019/11107541, there are the comments > - "in theory you would learn c++ from a book rather than jumping into codign competitions and get confused that they dont teach you the basics." > - "I would seriously suggest forgetting that leetcode even exists." > - "A good c++ book will be more useful than leetcode." Frankly (and I'm mentally prepared for this to be an unpopular stance), I don't see how these comments are relevant enough to this particular question to be considered appropriate. I dare even to go as far as to think them as indiscriminate and unwarranted. As I hovered over the "No longer needed" flag reason, it struck me to ask what other people think about this. On one hand, I get where the people who leave these comments are coming from: Good intentions, and wanting to share a bit of personal wisdom. I leave comments like this too sometimes. On the other hand, when I leave comments like this, often it's to shine more clear light on a weakness of a particular technology that is already on display through the question, and directly related to the problem. For example on a question where the VS Code Code Runner extension fails to quote arguments properly for a specific shell, I will say something like "this is why I suggest people not to use Code Runner for one-off programs. It doesn't quote arguments properly for all common shells", and often follow with "\<X dominantly popular language-support extension\> already supports doing this (and I believe) with proper shell quoting, so you don't even need Code Runner". But on questions where I see the type of comment I'm asking about here, I often feel like the comment section of the question post isn't an appropriate space to share that "personal wisdom". (I'm sorry for injecting my opinion into a question asking for peoples' thoughts, but I wouldn't be asking this question if I weren't conflicted like this). What do you all think? Is there a line? Is it fine and good to leave a "leetcode bad- go read textbooks" comment on any question that mentions leetcode? If there is a line, how is that line defined? Or if you have a personal line, how is _your_ line defined?