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I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

Debugging question missing crucial information

###Debugging question missing crucial information ...

 

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to https://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

###Debugging question missing crucial information ...

 

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to https://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

Debugging question missing crucial information

...

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to https://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

###Debugging question missing crucial information ...

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to http://stackoverflow.com/help/mcvehttps://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

###Debugging question missing crucial information ...

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to http://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

###Debugging question missing crucial information ...

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to https://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack OverflowRecent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

###Debugging question missing crucial information ...

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnoserelies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to http://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

###Debugging question missing crucial information ...

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to http://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

I talked about this briefly in Recent changes to close reasons on Stack Overflow:

###Debugging question missing crucial information ...

This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.

You could just use "unclear" for all of these questions, and in most cases you probably should. However, "Unclear" - like the "Not a Real Question" close reason that it replaced - is quite broad, and there are situations where you may wish to be more specific (a reasonable question asked in good faith that is simply missing some critical bit of information - for instance, a CSS issue that relies on a link to a live, production website in order to identify or diagnose).

As a general rule, any question where you might refrain from answering and instead link to http://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve could be closed using this reason.

Source Link
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