With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.
What kind of questions fit into this library? A lazy question about the best way to determine whether a point is inside a polygon, or a detailed, rigorous question about a segfault in a particle system used for a pinball game in which the author posts an MCVE along with detailed notes of what he tried to do to fix it which simply boils down to a typo in a line of code?
Proposal:
Include in the help documentation some kind of distinction that helps distinguish questions like these:
Do I cast the result of malloc? (likely to be considered opinion-based today)
How can I determine whether a 2D Point is within a Polygon? (likely to be considered lazy, too broad, opinion-based)
Performance optimization strategies of last resort (actually closed years later as too broad)
Why is using the JavaScript eval function a bad idea? (likely to be considered opinion-based)
... from actually bad questions for the site. These are some of the best kinds of questions for the site as an archive that helps prevent redundant questions many people might otherwise repeatedly want to ask.
A Great Question
A great question, if we're talking about archival purposes to answer questions that repeatedly crop up, tends to have the characteristics that can often be interpreted by many as "too broad", "opinion-based", and often "lazy".
These are the types of questions that tend to show up when programmers search Google for something and find SO to actually provide one of best resources. There's a common characteristic typically found there: the best kind of archived questions are very general (and therefore somewhat "broad"), loosely-detailed (and therefore somewhat "lazy"), possibly opinion-based (seeking best practices from experts), and have extremely detailed answers where people are competing to provide the best one.
Yet we have this awkward dilemma. Given the kind of questions the site encourages recently (or at least based on how the community interprets it), these types of questions have a tendency to get down-voted if not outright closed. I've seen my share get down-voted and closed this way while I kept thinking to myself, "If only someone like Mystical
answers this question, it could become the next great entry to the site". Instead it gets shut down before even having such an opportunity. As a result, such potential gem-producing questions often don't get much attention, and therefore lose their chance to become the next great entry to the SO archive.
Horrible Questions
Nevertheless, there are other types of "too broad" (can't answer without writing a book), "opinion-based" (can't possibly hope to get an expert consensus), and "lazy" (seeking other people to solve a narrowly-defined problem the author is having with minimal effort on the part of the author). These are horrible for the site.
Distinction
I'm not sure exactly how to draw the distinction between these two. English is not my first language, and I would leave the details to those in control of the text in the help center, the close options, etc. All I know is that there is a distinction, albeit murky.
Archival Qualities of SO
SO has become a great archive for expert knowledge. Sometimes I've found SO to be one of the best resources when seeking programming-related information, occasionally even more helpful than a Siggraph paper (I work in graphics). Where it can be excellent is that the best answers often come from those entrenched in the code: seasoned veterans who have tackled the same challenges.
Yet it really seems like this quality of SO is diminishing. What it is now encouraging (either directly or through the community's interpretation of what constitutes a good question) seems to be questions that are in the "technical support" vein. The site encourages detailed questions that are often very narrowly-applicable to only the very exact problem the author is working on.
While this is great for helping the author, these questions aren't necessarily the ones that are greatest for the site. The best ones for the site often boil down to the lazy, general, opinion-based, "What is the best way to do [X]?" kind of question.
So my request is to try to find a way in the wording and the help to establish a distinction that no longer discourages these questions which have so much potential to add to the site.
Edit
I realize I could be subject to great deal of bias here from selection bias to nostalgia glasses. This proposal is admittedly better suited to be taken into consideration by those with broader statistics. The one thing that doesn't seem to be prone to a misinterpretation of the past is simply what constitutes a great entry to the SO archives. A detailed question tends to be, by definition, narrowly applicable, since each detail that narrowly defines the problem tends to isolate its relevance to a smaller and smaller group. I am not exactly sure if "broad", "lazy", and "opinion-based" must go hand-in-hand with the opposite of such qualities, yet we're unlikely to find answers to questions already asked if the predominant questions are very narrowly-suited for the one asking the question.