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No, neverWhy require consensus! Just list all the close reasons given. Then in reviews all close reasons should be considered. If one of them still holds then and only then the question should be reopened. The worst questions are of the kind that do receive edits and then require another close reason. For example the first revision of a question might read:

and someone notes that it should probably use int, not pint. And now it becomes "off-topic - typo" - yet the closure now again requires 52 more votes?! Of course, if there were 42 prior votes of the no mre kind, all prior to the edit, the 5th3rd close vote with "typo, unlikely to help future readers" is the correct one for the current revision of the question, even though no mre has the majority.

No, never! The worst questions are of the kind that do receive edits and then require another close reason. For example the first revision of a question might read:

and someone notes that it should probably use int, not pint. And now it becomes "off-topic - typo" - yet the closure now again requires 5 more votes?! Of course, if there were 4 prior votes of the no mre kind, all prior to the edit, the 5th close vote with "typo, unlikely to help future readers" is the correct one for the current revision of the question, even though no mre has the majority.

Why require consensus! Just list all the close reasons given. Then in reviews all close reasons should be considered. If one of them still holds then and only then the question should be reopened. The worst questions are of the kind that do receive edits and then require another close reason. For example the first revision of a question might read:

and someone notes that it should probably use int, not pint. And now it becomes "off-topic - typo" - yet the closure now again requires 2 more votes?! Of course, if there were 2 prior votes of the no mre kind, all prior to the edit, the 3rd close vote with "typo, unlikely to help future readers" is the correct one for the current revision of the question, even though no mre has the majority.

There are many things that I believe should be addressed in question closure

Tag score should matter

I believe the tag score of the caster should affect the weight of both close and reopen votes.

Why does glibc's strlen need to be so complicated to run quickly? was one of these close wars. It was closed first as "too broad". I cast a reopen vote to be able to answer the question.

It then did get to HNQ and was subject to debate even outside the network. Subsequently it was closed with "primarily opinion based". It did also undergo drastic edits by participants so that the question now barely resembles the original one, and therefore my own answer in itself barely answers that which is being asked in the current form of the question.

Even though going through drastic edits, as a gold holder I consider it any of those revisions a very good on-topic C question. And so did many other gold badge holders, including one moderator. Now seeing who did cast close votes, many of them seem to be only drive by answerers in the compared to the many gold badge users that frequent the tag and are seen casting close votes on the umpteeth typo. To avoid close wars, perhaps a gold badge holder could be allowed to cast a "keep open" vote that would cause the remaining vote count to be increased by one, i.e. something like

  • a normal close quota is 5 votes
  • a gold badge holder can give 2 close votes
  • a gold badge holder can give 2 reopen votes
  • a gold badge holder can cast a "keep open vote" that would increase quota by one, and then not be eligible to subsequently cast a reopen vote

Notify the OP immediately

The OP should be notified immediately of receiving close votes and informing them of the suggested reason for closure. The reason why majority of posts are closed in the first place and remain closed is due to the OP's negligence in reading the help center or understanding the site rules. Especially sometimes when browsing casually on mobile phone - and while it is easy to cast a close vote, it is a tad bit harder to write a long explanation on what's wrong with the post using a mobile phone and adding the relevant help center links...

About consensus

No, never! The worst questions are of the kind that do receive edits and then require another close reason. For example the first revision of a question might read:

error: expected '=', ',', ';', 'asm' or 'attribute' before 'beer'

I have got the error expected '=', ',', ';', 'asm' or '__attribute__' before 'beer' in my code. How do I fix it?

Tags:

The question naturally receives close votes and comments for not having a sscce mcve minreprex mre

The OP amends the question adding the code

#include <complex.h>
complex pint beer;

and someone notes that it should probably use int, not pint. And now it becomes "off-topic - typo" - yet the closure now again requires 5 more votes?! Of course, if there were 4 prior votes of the no mre kind, all prior to the edit, the 5th close vote with "typo, unlikely to help future readers" is the correct one for the current revision of the question, even though no mre has the majority.

I do not think chameleon questions should be the most difficult ones to close.