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Requesting an off-site resource would probably be the incorrect close reason indeed. However, it doesn't matter all that much. The important thing is that the question was closed.

As a rule of thumb: if a question should be closed but was closed for the wrong reason, leave it be. Don't bother re-opening questions just to close them for another reason. Doing so just creates extra work for everyone, by shovelling crap between various review queues.

Looking at the original question http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/43969753/1https://stackoverflow.com/revisions/43969753/1, it is a very broad question that just (not too clearly) asks how to search through a container with no specifics mentioned and no code or effort by the OP. Mostly it is a code begging/"read the manual for me" question.

This could have been closed as too broad, but any form of close reason is fine, since SO is not a code-writing service.

  • For reasons unknown, the post was then re-opened by someone who should know better.
  • After which it was again closed, this time correctly as too broad.
  • The edits did not change the fact that the question is still code begging/"read the manual for me". There is no reason to polish crap, just close it.
  • For reasons unknown, the post was then yet again re-opened.
  • And now someone has found a duplicate and closed it again, which should finally settle the issue.

Requesting an off-site resource would probably be the incorrect close reason indeed. However, it doesn't matter all that much. The important thing is that the question was closed.

As a rule of thumb: if a question should be closed but was closed for the wrong reason, leave it be. Don't bother re-opening questions just to close them for another reason. Doing so just creates extra work for everyone, by shovelling crap between various review queues.

Looking at the original question http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/43969753/1, it is a very broad question that just (not too clearly) asks how to search through a container with no specifics mentioned and no code or effort by the OP. Mostly it is a code begging/"read the manual for me" question.

This could have been closed as too broad, but any form of close reason is fine, since SO is not a code-writing service.

  • For reasons unknown, the post was then re-opened by someone who should know better.
  • After which it was again closed, this time correctly as too broad.
  • The edits did not change the fact that the question is still code begging/"read the manual for me". There is no reason to polish crap, just close it.
  • For reasons unknown, the post was then yet again re-opened.
  • And now someone has found a duplicate and closed it again, which should finally settle the issue.

Requesting an off-site resource would probably be the incorrect close reason indeed. However, it doesn't matter all that much. The important thing is that the question was closed.

As a rule of thumb: if a question should be closed but was closed for the wrong reason, leave it be. Don't bother re-opening questions just to close them for another reason. Doing so just creates extra work for everyone, by shovelling crap between various review queues.

Looking at the original question https://stackoverflow.com/revisions/43969753/1, it is a very broad question that just (not too clearly) asks how to search through a container with no specifics mentioned and no code or effort by the OP. Mostly it is a code begging/"read the manual for me" question.

This could have been closed as too broad, but any form of close reason is fine, since SO is not a code-writing service.

  • For reasons unknown, the post was then re-opened by someone who should know better.
  • After which it was again closed, this time correctly as too broad.
  • The edits did not change the fact that the question is still code begging/"read the manual for me". There is no reason to polish crap, just close it.
  • For reasons unknown, the post was then yet again re-opened.
  • And now someone has found a duplicate and closed it again, which should finally settle the issue.
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Lundin
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Requesting an off-site resource would probably be the incorrect close reason indeed. However, it doesn't matter all that much. The important thing is that the question was closed.

As a rule of thumb: if a question should be closed but was closed for the wrong reason, leave it be. Don't bother re-opening questions just to close them for another reason. Doing so just creates extra work for everyone, by shovelling crap between various review queues.

Looking at the original question http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/43969753/1, it is a very broad question that just (not too clearly) asks how to search through a container with no specifics mentioned and no code or effort by the OP. Mostly it is a code begging/"read the manual for me" question.

This could have been closed as too broad, but any form of close reason is fine, since SO is not a code-writing service.

  • For reasons unknown, the post was then re-opened by someone who should know better.
  • After which it was again closed, this time correctly as too broad.
  • The edits did not change the fact that the question is still code begging/"read the manual for me". There is no reason to polish crap, just close it.
  • For reasons unknown, the post was then yet again re-opened.
  • And now someone has found a duplicate and closed it again, which should finally settle the issue.