Yes, but even so, there may be lots of problems that I think are 50% solved or maybe wide open and that it turns out are maybe 95% solved (loosely speaking), and I’d still like to hear about those.
Can we start a thread for unproductive but frequently asked questions that can easily be replaced with other, more productive questions? Like if you’re asking this, you probably mean to ask something else. Does that sound useful?
One example of these is yelling at a small child, demanding to know why they broke something, which is not that useful because small children sometimes don’t have good answers or they have answers that don’t quite take all of reality into account. (For example, maybe the child wanted to see what would happen but didn’t realize might be permanent or unfavorable.) The more productive question is “How can we prevent you from breaking these types of objects again?”
“Do you think this is a good and useful idea? And can I perhaps legitimize the idea further by persuading you to start the thread instead of me since you’ve been starting a lot of repository threads lately?”
See? Questions are a tricky business! That was an unintentionally round-about and meta way of demonstrating it.
Yes, but even so, there may be lots of problems that I think are 50% solved or maybe wide open and that it turns out are maybe 95% solved (loosely speaking), and I’d still like to hear about those.
Can we start a thread for unproductive but frequently asked questions that can easily be replaced with other, more productive questions? Like if you’re asking this, you probably mean to ask something else. Does that sound useful?
One example of these is yelling at a small child, demanding to know why they broke something, which is not that useful because small children sometimes don’t have good answers or they have answers that don’t quite take all of reality into account. (For example, maybe the child wanted to see what would happen but didn’t realize might be permanent or unfavorable.) The more productive question is “How can we prevent you from breaking these types of objects again?”
You can start whatever threads you want! You have the power! (What question should you have replaced that question with, I wonder...)
“Do you think this is a good and useful idea? And can I perhaps legitimize the idea further by persuading you to start the thread instead of me since you’ve been starting a lot of repository threads lately?”
See? Questions are a tricky business! That was an unintentionally round-about and meta way of demonstrating it.