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Welcome to the Judaism community on Codidact!

Will you help us build our community of learners? Drop into our study hall, ask questions, help others with answers to their questions, share a d'var torah if you're so inclined, invite your friends, and join us in building this community together. Not an ask-the-rabbi service, just people at all levels learning together.

Limitations on "too broad" as a close reason

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"Too broad" is currently a close reason. How broad is too broad?

  • "Cannot be answered in just a few paragraphs" seems too vague to be meaningful, and some questions can be very narrow yet require long answers.
  • "Invites multiple distinct answers with no way to determine which is correct" – this is Judaism; that's basically a given that a question falls into that category.
    • Narrower definition: List questions. Any question which specifically seeks a list of answers, perhaps of at least length X for some sufficiently large X.
  • "To sufficiently answer the question, one would need to know an unreasonably large number of subjects, for some suitable definition of 'unreasonably large.'" Again I see a problem here in that some questions may on their face not require such a broad knowledge base, nor is it always so clear where you draw the line between knowledge bases. Conversely there may be a question which at face value does require a broad knowledge base, yet can actually be answered succinctly (especially if the question is "are there any sources which..." and the answer is "no").

Now, there may very well be a grey area between "definitely okay" and "definitely too broad." That's okay. What I'm seeking here is if anyone has a good yardstick for measuring the "broadness" of a post.

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