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I think it's kinda silly to vote down a non-programming question when it is still highly technical in nature. This seems like a good place to have an open forum about software engineering and all aspects of the trade from requirements through testing and monitoring.

Almost always our jobs as engineers require more than just cranking out code every day. We need to think about how the code will be tested, how the code will be monitored in production, etc. Many time a little guidance for finding the right software packages to integrate into your software system is just as relevant as finding a specific API to get your code working.

Am I totally off-base here? Or am I missing the point of this site and should just find a different community?

EDIT (JH):

There is a close reason called 'Not Programming Related'.

If Atwood wanted non programming questions, he wouldn't have put that there.

EDIT 2 (VV):

It's worth mentioning that there are many not strictly programming related questions that are upvoted and answered, many related to communication, career development, job hunting and so on. As non programming related is so ambiguous, you might stumble upon a trigger happy 3000+ rep guy, or you might not, but that's how it is, you need a bit of luck when the question might not be directly programming related. So I think you are in the right community, unless that luck factor bothers you too much. Just search for tags "career" "testing" "interview" to see for yourself. Although on your example, testing, architecture and so on, are definitely considered by most if not all people as programming related.

EDIT 3 (DJ47):

Thanks for the answers. I guess I just need to tag my questions appropriately so that other members of the community know what exactly it is about.


25% accept rate
I am of the same opinion. The non-programming questions may be as useful as the pure coding stuff – andy.gurin Nov 9 '08 at 20:22
I guess my argument is that programming is more than just code. In fact, I forgot to mention the MOST important (IMHO) aspect of programming: communication. If I had a programmer-stakeholder communication question would that be inappropriate? – djensen47 Nov 9 '08 at 20:23
Click on "about" at the top of the page, it says "Stack Overflow is a programming Q & A site that's free.". Note the "programming Q & A" part. Also, as Jonathan just mentioned, there is a "Not Programming Related" close option for a reason. – Robert Gamble Nov 9 '08 at 20:27
This site actually has a pretty narrow focus on programming. Jeff has talked before about not allowing those types of questions and even possibly creating a seperate SO like site for them. But until then, SO isn't the place for them. – Simucal Nov 9 '08 at 20:30
SO is what its community makes it. Its founders' focus might be "programming", but that encompasses a huge area, Jeff or Joel can play with the rules to adjust what happens, but these are pretty blunt instruments. – RoadWarrior Nov 9 '08 at 23:00
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migrated to meta.stackoverflow.com by Bill the Lizard Aug 31 at 19:49

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