There are questions where the correct answer is "it's undefined behavior" and the user is unaware of this. Those are covered by Should I try to explain undefined behaviour?
However, then there are "Not in my universe questions" where the premise is flawed simply because the undefined behavior is part of the question itself.
This is not about questions which ask "is this undefined behavior" and expect a language-lawyer-esque justification.
The most recent example is Uninitialized pointers vs NULL and 0, in which the user says:
I have a uninitialized int pointer. And when printed this always shows as 0.
But when checked against NULL it does not pass the condition.
And interestingly this wild pointer takes value without throwing Segmentation Fault.
Any explanations??
The line I've bolded is where the user is clearly expecting a segmentation fault for undefined behavior. The answerer then says:
[...]
- Dereferencing an uninitialized pointer is undefined behavior, anything could happen. In particular, it doesn't mean segmentation fault will always happen.
To sum up, exploring UB like this doesn't prove anything.
A question whose sole premise is not about UB could receive a more complex answer which has a plausible explanation for why the program is behaving the way it is. However, the above linked question is clearly contrived and there's no other possible answer than "it's UB". I think the current close vote "unclear what you're asking" makes sense because the question requires more detail in order to be a "real" question.
To quote David Schwartz:
Fix the bug and the mystery will go away.
Is this question off-topic?