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Putting a question on hold is meant to allow the OP to work out deficienciesallow the OP to work out deficiencies in their questions, with the message being, "If you can edit the question to better fit [the] model, we can get you the help you need."

Putting a question on hold is meant to allow the OP to work out deficiencies in their questions, with the message being, "If you can edit the question to better fit [the] model, we can get you the help you need."

Putting a question on hold is meant to allow the OP to work out deficiencies in their questions, with the message being, "If you can edit the question to better fit [the] model, we can get you the help you need."

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Now, I'd argue that someone who asked why String word = "word"; System.out.println(word == "word"); returned false simply didn't do the researchdidn't do the research, or if they're getting some kind of obscure stack trace that comes up within the first five search results simply didn't bother to look it up. The former really should be closed as a duplicate, and the latter should simply be downvoted, which sends a clear-enough signal that the question is not useful to the community.


  

Now, I'd argue that someone who asked why String word = "word"; System.out.println(word == "word"); returned false simply didn't do the research, or if they're getting some kind of obscure stack trace that comes up within the first five search results simply didn't bother to look it up. The former really should be closed as a duplicate, and the latter should simply be downvoted, which sends a clear-enough signal that the question is not useful to the community.


 

Now, I'd argue that someone who asked why String word = "word"; System.out.println(word == "word"); returned false simply didn't do the research, or if they're getting some kind of obscure stack trace that comes up within the first five search results simply didn't bother to look it up. The former really should be closed as a duplicate, and the latter should simply be downvoted, which sends a clear-enough signal that the question is not useful to the community.

 
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Makoto
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I'm going to catch a lot of flak for this, but I don't believe that this warrants a close reason on its own.

Here are a few reasons why I feel this way.

##Conveys a negative message

Putting a question on hold is meant to allow the OP to work out deficiencies in their questions, with the message being, "If you can edit the question to better fit [the] model, we can get you the help you need."

Putting a question on hold because it lacks sufficient information to answer the question is concise and respectful. So they didn't include the stack trace that they said they were suffering from. The close reason (along with a half a dozen comments) will tell them such.

Putting a question on hold because it was unclear as to what they were asking is concise and respectful. Their question contained a lot of technobabble that wasn't really related to their problem, so the hope/prayer is that the question will be edited into an answerable state.

Putting a question on hold because the person doesn't have a "minimal understanding" of a problem feels like a slap to the face. The primary reason that they're asking anything in the first place is that they don't have an understanding of something.

Now, I'd argue that someone who asked why String word = "word"; System.out.println(word == "word"); returned false simply didn't do the research, or if they're getting some kind of obscure stack trace that comes up within the first five search results simply didn't bother to look it up. The former really should be closed as a duplicate, and the latter should simply be downvoted, which sends a clear-enough signal that the question is not useful to the community.

Questions that warranted that closure reason in the past were usually downvoted to oblivion anyway. Sending the double-whammy seems...overkill here.

##Open to abuse

I'll admit that the accuracy of question closure ain't much to be proud of, and it wasn't really much of anything to celebrate when this close reason did exist. But, with the list of titles you're providing here, I'll show you why "Lacks Minimal Understanding" isn't correct to apply here.

  • jQuery parallexUiSlider plugin problem, can't find the bug.

    • If the specific part of the problem isn't well isolated; that is, if a whole bunch of code is posted and nothing else, it should be closed as lacks sufficient detail.
    • If the question is an abstract description of the problem, it might warrant closing as unclear what you're asking.
  • Why if statement failing in Python?

    • Probably some rookie misunderstanding the falsy nature of booleans in Python. It happens. I wouldn't bother closing it; rather, look for a duplicate.
  • Regular expression for telephone not working.

    • If there's no regex or no test data, lacks sufficient detail.
  • JS function in jquery bug.

    • If there's too much code such that the problem isn't isolated, again, unclear what you're asking. Question needs to be narrowed.
  • Button click not working.

  • pop is not working properly.

  • Java program in course not working.

    • These all merit the same response for me; if there's insufficient detail, it should be closed as such. If there's too much code such that the scope is too broad, it should be closed as such.

##Kind of feels like a "quick fix" which doesn't fix anything

A lot of the questions that I see that would fall under your criteria for closure under this are often misunderstood XY problems, or poorly-phrased questions. The knee-jerk reaction to a question like these is to close them, but they probably really need to be edited into shape, or get better clarification from the OP instead. Closing them without really looking at why this question was asked in the first place doesn't prevent people from asking bad questions; it only preserves their ignorance.


So...pretty much what I said above places me in the firm "no" category on this suggestion.