As I wrote in response to Is it always a good idea to demand the OP "post some code"?:
...Then there are problems that don't really need any code, at least not in the question, but where code can be a more effective way to communicate what's being done than prose would be. Doesn't even need to be real code - pseudocode works fine. Your example falls into this category - it didn't need code, but the code is easier to read than the prose, and together they help to clarify the problem in a way that either one alone wouldn't.
Your example falls into this category also. The asker isn't trying to debug a problem with code he's written; he's trying to write something but doesn't know how. The code exists only to help explain the context in which he's operating - it doesn't have to demonstrate a reproduceable problem, and in fact asking for a complete program listing just asks for noise. If you've been around for a while (and you have...) you're more than familiar with folks dumping their entire source listings into questions only to refer to a two-line section somewhere in the middle; for some problems, this is unavoidable - you need the full program (or at least a full program) in order to reproduce the problem. But for HOWTO questions, it is almost always counter-productive; answerers and future readers alike benefit more from brevity and code that gets straight to the point.
So no, the question shouldn't be closed.
You raised another question here, as sort of an after-thought:
If we have quality policies I think they should be applied regardless of the asker's reputation or whether the question was answered.
(emphasis mine)
As much as we might hope for some platonic ideal that we could hold all questions to and thereby obtain quality, the truth is that even questions that follow all the rules are usually terrible; truth is, the only good questions are the ones that get good answers. Jeff wrote about this years ago in Optimizing For Pearls, Not Sand:
Perhaps you've noticed a theme here. Incoming questions are a universal constant, all around us in countless billions. But answers -- truly brilliant, amazing, correct answers -- are as rare as pearls. Thus, questions are merely the sand that produces the pearl.
You don't throw away a pearl because you don't believe the oyster should've been able to produce it. As much as it chafes to admit it, answers are a factor when determining the worth of a question - indeed, they are probably the most important factor. All of our rules, policies, guidelines and so on are built around two fundamental goals:
- Encouraging useful answers
- Helping others with the same question find those answers
The most carefully-constructed question on earth is worthless if it doesn't achieve #1 and ideally #2 as well. When asking yourself whether or not to close a question, first and foremost ask if it will be usefully answered. If it is, might be, or you really don't know... Then don't worry about it.