In my eyes, the purpose of a question is to ask something that will reduce the need for people who come up with the same question to post that question, since it would have already been sufficiently answered if the question was specific enough to cover the question space. If I am curious whether I should use int or int32_t in my programs, I can look up Difference between int32, int, int32_t, int8 and int8_t and likely won't ask it since so many questions of this sort have been asked already that people will look at me funny if I even try, so each well formed question of this sort prevents countless more from being asked.
There is also another purpose, which is to bring up an interesting discussion to reconsider questions to whose answers are no longer sufficient due to changes in technology/increase/decrease of question space, where one question could have been specific at one time, but now too broad to answer and requires being split up into new questions and discussed once again. This also includes situations where answers to questions are no longer true due to changes in technology, e.g. answers that JavaScript can only be used in browser were very popular very little time ago, and are now downright lies. Here is an excellent example of a question that changed context quite a few times in recent history: Why use XML(SOAP) when JSON so simple and easy to handle?.
Another reason is to bring up something an existing answer to a question has overlooked, or not made clear enough. Thus there may be answers to the question, but they still cause confusion since they leave out important things or don't emphasize them well enough, so it is fair to ask whether a solution to an existing question has left something out since you are not convinced that their answer answers your question. An example of this is that if I am trying to understand hash tables but have no idea how buckets or probe sequences get resolved. In this case, I try finding answers but struggle, so I ask a naive question like the one I posted earlier (How do hash tables resolve bucket ambiguity and probes?) granted I should have formed it better as it is a disgrace of a question but it was bothering me at the time, and now google searching "hash table probe ambiguity" brings up one StackOverflow result on the first page up from none) in turn benefitting both the person searching and StackOverflow, and I am sure somebody someday will relate to my confusion and appreciate the existence of the question and its' answers. And even though the question is pretty bad, it gives a new space for people to improve upon if they end up having new question, rather than if the question has never been asked before where in some cases, new interesting questions won't appear until less interesting holes in existing questions have been answered for those that are struggling.