I think the strongest reasons to close questions, in order of descending importance, are as follows:
- The question helps no-one, not even the poster (e.g. because it’s so broad or so narrow that it’ll never get an answer (Example).
- The question helps only the poster because it is based on wrong assumptions and only serves to weed these out (Example).
- The question helps only the poster because it (inadvertently) asks for the solution to multiple problems at once and is thus very unlikely to help any future visitor (Example).
- The question has already been answered elsewhere on the site (or on other stack exchange sites) and no answers provide new insight into the problem.
- The question is badly suited to a Q&A format because it is opinion-based.
- The question is so completely unrelated to the subject matter of the site that they’re going after the completely wrong audience.
Questions of type #2, #3 and #4 are especially problematic if they begin showing up as “noise” in the results to completely unrelated searches and prevent people with actual problems from getting answers quickly. Noisy search results also drive people to ask duplicate questions because they didn’t find the canonical answer first.
Personally, I’ve been hesitant to hand out close votes for questions that are just a little-bit off-topic. Typically, such questions are specific enough that they don’t have the problem of adding noise to search results – and if they do, that can easily be mitigated by wording the title as unambiguously as possible.
So, no, I wouldn’t close the post in question because I can see no downsides to allowing such (slightly off-topic) question and see no reason to close solely on the basis of principle.