The trouble is, there's no direct relationship between "lines of code" and "minimal", which is not to say that there aren't some limits and rules-of-thumb. There's generally no way to reliably substitute a qualitative measurement for a quantitative one like this and expect it to work. People try and usually fail.
If we had a single number that meant minimal, or even a ballpark, very likely the community would stop beating around the bush and instead use that number directly: "Your code has exceeded the 50 line example limit. Please edit it down to 50 lines."
It's easy to see how this sort of arbitrary constraint would go horribly wrong baked into the question editor with a character/word/line counter, even if we had topic- or language-specific cutoffs. Askers would squish things down to fit the line limit, harming readability, or omit other important information essential to the problem (minimal entails adding code just as often, if not more often, than removing code!). That's counter-productive.
Absent a one-size-fits-all solution, it's up to each asker to use experience and intuition along with the site help pages, the FAQ, other high-quality posts in the relevant tags, and just looking critically at the problem domain itself to determine how much code is appropriate to the question at hand.
Sometimes "minimal" requires 1 line in certain contexts, sometimes 100 or 200 in others. In general, though, if it exceeds that by a large amount or involves code hosted externally, it's almost certainly out of scope for SO or the application needs to be redesigned before effective debugging can proceed.
Furthermore, I can't think of any questions that were useful to me which required links to codebases on GitHub. Without sarcasm, you'll probably have to pay someone to look at it and the problem is probably not one that would interest the community much anyway.
You can think of this as minimizing the signal to noise ratio. When there's noise in posts, signal (value) decreases.
Let's say you have a 3k line codebase with a problem that ultimately was caused by an off-by-one error in a small function that could have been localized and minimized down to about 10 lines of code. If you post the 3k line codebase, you're essentially asking every future visitor and every prospective answer to minimize it for you, replacing O(1) with O(n) work. This is a huge disservice to the community -- if there is value to the bug because it's a common one, there's too much noise for there to be any good to anyone. Surely, we can find a simpler illustrative version of the same fundamental bug to become the canonical thread for that problem, then close (in theory) most everything else as a duplicate (yet again, improving O(n) to O(1)).
Usually, it's not 3k lines of code, but if you're posting 100 lines of irrelevant code for a 10-line problem, that's still obfuscation that needs to be cleared away. Oftentimes, there are other problems and antipatterns in those 100 lines and discussion and answer proposals head off the rails, focus isn't placed on the single, answerable problem and everyone is unhappy.
Most of the time, when you strip out all of the noise, what's left is a duplicate of a question that's already been asked or has an obvious answer, because the vast majority of programming problems aren't novel.
Learning to strip out the noise to expose the root of a problem is a challenging (but critical) programming skill that is the essence of debugging. Failing to minimize is pretty much tantamount to not attempting to debug the problem. The help center offers two very good approaches to minimization:
- Restart from scratch. Create a new program, adding in only what is needed to see the problem. Use simple, descriptive names for functions and variables – don't copy the names you’re using in your existing code.
- Divide and conquer. If you’re not sure what the source of the problem is, start removing code a bit at a time until the problem disappears – then add the last part back.
This requires (often difficult) work that's expected to be done by the asker, not future visitors or answerers. Failing to do it puts burden on everyone else, produces questions unfit as future resources for others, and robs the asker of learning how to debug their own programs. When non-minimal posts are closed, it's a good thing for everyone and improves the signal-to-noise ratio of the whole website.