I was just about to ask a question on SO that is technically very similar to the question http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32969672/why-does-c-have-these-weird-translation-limits-section-2-2-4-1, though perhaps slightly different in spirit. When I searched for relevant tags to add, I started typing _history_, leading me to [tag:history] and its related wiki page, warning me about the following: >DO NOT use this tag for questions about the history of a programming concept or feature; those questions are off-topic. After reading about the reasons behind its [deprecation](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/255424/how-should-the-history-tag-be-disambiguated), and a relevant question on [meta.programmers](https://softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/5633/is-programming-history-on-topic), I'm still at loss. I feel that if http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32969672/why-does-c-have-these-weird-translation-limits-section-2-2-4-1 is on topic, then my question-to-be is on topic. However, just because a question has escaped the clutches of the diligent moderators doesn't necessarily mean it's on-topic, although it _was_ recently posted, a fair bit after the ominous last edit to the [tag:history] tag. My question is definitely not about _programming_ history, so it should really not go to programmers. It is about a very specific tool and its implementation and usage. It is however a _why_ question, which should be off-topic on any site on the stack exchange network according to the boilerplate _"You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face"_ written on every page in the help center. A literal interpretation of that sentence would exclude a lot of very good questions. ###... and now to my actual meta question Is http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32969672/why-does-c-have-these-weird-translation-limits-section-2-2-4-1 on topic considering present-day stackoverflow culture, and can I interpret its continued existence as a guideline to what type of questions I can ask?