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8:45 PM
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Q: Why is this question closed for "There are either too many possible answers"?

HoneySee: What does "CG" in CGGeometry, CGPoint, CGRect stand for? This question only has 1 possible answer and that is Core Graphics. It's in Apple's documentation. Shouldn't the question be reopened? Or is it that I am missing something? The question is asked so that a developer would have bet...

 
It's not a programming question, so it's unquestionably off topic, although yes, it should be closed for a different reason than it currently has. Not really worth reopening it just to re-close it though.
 
Part of programming is to make it semantic, readable. Isn't this even remotely related?
 
@Servy Does that mean this is off topic?
 
@Honey Remotely related to programming, sure, on topic as per the site's guidelines for what is on topic, I don't see how, no.
@NathanOliver Looks offtopic to me, yes.
 
@Servy So what close reason should be used? I don't see how it falls under any of the current close reasons.
 
8:45 PM
@NathanOliver Offtopic, like I said.
 
@Servy So a custom close reason?
 
@Servy Which part of the guidelines are you referring to?
 
@Honey "a specific programming problem"
 
@Servy You said 'yourself' it is remotely related. Anyhow...
 
@Honey Yes, but that doesn't make it an on topic quesiton on the site. If the on topic guidelines said, "anything remotely related to programming" was on topic, rather than, "a specific programming problem", then that would matter, but it doesn't, so it doesn't.
 
8:45 PM
When the question was closed, it had the phrase for both objective-c and swift in it, and it also said What is the full name of a CGPoint, CGRect. Both of those make it look like a question that requires multiple answers, one for each language mentioned, and one for each type mantioned.
 
@Servy - I think you're being way too strict in your interpretation of what's appropriate for the site. This is useful information, useful only to programmers, that explains the history and context of calls within a specific API. See also: "What does the NS prefix mean?". Unless people just want this site to be "debug this very specific code for me", I think there's plenty of room for questions like this.
 
@BradLarson what does the k means in imagemagick? Is that useful?
 
@BradLarson The question is 100% not useful, insofar as the information is readily available in lots of other places. Nobody would be unable to find the answer to this question if this post didn't exist. It in no way makes the internet a better place. It also doesn't, "explain the history and context of calls within a specific API", it just provides the name of the API the reader is already using. Also you've presented a false dichotomy. We are not obligated to allow, "what is my API called" in order to have questions other than, "debug my code for me".
 
@Servy - "what does cg stand for in cgrect" is one of the first autocompletes in Google when you start typing that phrase. The clearest result points to SO, and I see no other primary references on the first page of results: google.com/… . Stack Overflow has clearly made it easier for people to find the correct answer to this common programming question.
 
@BradLarson I saw 4 other sites with an answer to that question on the first page. And then of course there's the fact that both of the answers to the question are just quotes from the official documentation, so even the SO post isn't a primary reference. So no, you've by no means demonstrated your claim at all. You have in fact specifically dis-proven it.
 
8:45 PM
@Servy, this is getting long. If you want your opinion - that the question is off-topic - to be heard, then write an answer here please.
 

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