Trying to understand why was I wrong in casting a "too broad" flag on this question: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47903376/wordpress-on-subdomain-with-laravel-as-frontend, since a mod declined my flag. [![flag history][1]][1] When I raised the flag, the edit which added the `.htaccess` hadn't been made yet, but I do not think that edit actually helped the OPs case (the question states that the user is using PHP's built-in server, which doesn't read `.htaccess` at all, something else to address in a potential answer). I think it is not possible to answer the question without writing the specific router for the questioner, for which there is zero code provided. You could answer something like: > If you were not using the built-in server > you could do it like `this` in apache > or like `this` in nginx > or like `this` in IIS; > But if neither option is available or you do not have access to the requisite configuration files you should write a router like > `this` [code showing how to build such a route on Laravel, despite no code having been provided by the OP]_ But I feel that such an answer would be impossible to verify against the OPs requirements, and necessarily too broad for SO scope. So assuming this question is **not** too broad, why is it not? The objective, logically, is waste _less_ people's time raising unnecessary flags. (Bringing this up in meta because the "declined" text made me think that a mod had declined my flag directly, instead of it being _disputed_ by reviewers; if those labels no longer reflect that distinction, my present question is rather silly) [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/81KTc.png