There is a lot of contrary precedence and advice regarding those questions known as "give me teh codez" [or GMTCs]. The consensus is clearly to downvote, but what of close votes? Given two "How do I X? Plz thnx" questions, what makes one close-voteable and the other not?
Stance 1: Following the site precedents and the majority of review audits seems to suggest that most GMTCs should be closed as "too broad".
Stance 2: Major answers on SOMeta (including this one) claim that some GMTCs should be closed as "too broad", and others shouldn't - that the fact that it is a GMTC is not a good enough reason to close.
In the linked answer above, three questions are given which are apparently considered "good questions", but for some reason, I cannot see the distinction between them and the bad examples given in the same answer. The only visible difference is that the "good examples" are highly upvoted, and are very old protected community questions (apparently OPd by Jeff Atwood)? Since we judge questions on merit, not poster, what makes these different? I really want to know - I just cannot see it.
The help documents seem to suggest that questions should have specific, verifiable problems, not just be vampirically asking for code. Yet, the close reason 'too broad' is applied without any consistency. High rep users (and many audits) close "give me teh codez" questions as "too broad" on a regular basis, and this is treated as correct, until it isn't.
We need some consistency. What makes an unabashed demand for finished code acceptable in one case, and unacceptable in another? Our site has no established standard for this, as the examples in both directions are indistinguishable. If our standard really is to leave GMTC questions open, why is the entire site precedence wholly contrary?
I am irritated by this because I hate inconsistency. I can adapt to leaving GMTC questions open and downvoting them in principle. However, the current precedent sets the entirety of our review audit system, so following that "don't close" guideline will undoubtedly lead to a review ban. I encounter no less than two audits a day that follow the precedent of closing GMTCs as "too broad".
The inconsistency hurts everyone: askers can't know what's expected of them, answerers frequently get nailed for daring to answer a GMTC, and reviewers have to deal with audits that reinforce both contrary views (even after the audit is disputed).
I'm really looking for an answer from a diamond-mod here - everyone else has varying views on the topic.
In Short:
1) Among questions that only contain "How do I do X?", what makes it "too broad" or "should be closed" vs. "leave open"? "It's subjective" isn't a good enough answer if we're going to be upholding audits in both directions, which we presently are.
2) What can be done to make the site's official stance, one way or the other, actually clear? Burying the stance exclusively in a meta post is a bad way of establishing enforced regulations. In the very least, How to Ask and other help pages need to be updated to reflect the official stance, one way or the other.