I am honestly not certain about what has happened to this question of mine, but I know it isn't the first time this has happened to a question.
You write a question that you think is clearly stating the problem. The people complain, and you realize that it probably is too broad or is unclear. You manage every kind of edit until finally you just start over from scratch to make a question that is more concise.
That question of mine is now a mess. There are comments that aren't needed because of previous edits, the question was already down-voted twice from before, and I got an answer to my final edit which means that it is clear and concise, and especially since the answer I checked did answer my question thoroughly.
I am not here to complain, but there is a genuine problem here. Why does my question just continue to be a source of reputation loss? Why has my moderator flag to clean up the question not yet been answered to? Is my question really that bad?
The real question is: why isn't there just some "moderator reset" flag where the comments, answers, and vote count is removed because the question has changed so much that the old data is misleading and makes the new question confusing?
(And couldn't there be a sort of off-hand, to-the-side, chat feed for real-time feedback? Or at least a hot link to a dedicated chat for a question?)
Edit: The problem seems to be feedback often times. Perhaps it would be useful if a feature modified the down-vote button to require a reason why something is down-voted would be given, and then the ability to fix and appeal that down-vote might actually be a good system.
Edit (2): I believe it would be helpful to add: I know exactly what kind of question I wanted to ask, I just didn't know how to put it in words. Often times I don't have the words the first time around for my questions (in general, not just SO), but that is probably thanks to sleep deprivation.
I didn't actually edit what the question was asking. The previous title was, "How do I execute an x86 assembly instruction programmatically?"; the current title is, "How can I dynamically create and execute machine code at runtime?" The two titles are analogous yet confusing because the words in the first question have an ambiguous context, so the question was perceived as being "too broad", and the new title is blatantly broad.
I have edited the question to a bare minimum which is very obvious in what it asks for. I removed the unrelated clauses in the first paragraph and narrowed the question to just assembly.
I'm pretty certain that the question at heart is quite clear, and @SandPiper is probably right about the question probably being asked in the wrong place, but I believe I can conclude safely that the reason my question was found too broad was because of the ambiguous vocabulary and unnecessary clauses that made everyone think I wanted to know how the JVM produces machine code and how I can hack that mechanism. It would seem this question turned into the Protestant Reformation with all these interpretations…
Clearly, this was just one big misunderstanding, and it took this long just to find out what the problem is because there was no way (except through meta) to find out what the problem was.
I'm not really for the same idea mentioned by @BSMP (mentor chat, it doesn't sound very appealing), but a dedicated, auto-generated chat room for each question visible on the left or right side would be an easy way to just "ask away" the quirks, problems, and clarifications when the comment section is inadequate. You still see plenty of times a comment from a moderator in a question or two that says "moved to chat" because discussion is not what the comment section is for.