This appears to be a frequent occurrence.
Some user is frustrated by his/her experience on SO. They come to Meta. They may use words such as "those arrogant SO vigilantes who closed my question."
Despite all this, there is a well-meaning in-scope Meta question at the bottom of it all. Nobody is voting to close. You just don't agree with their tone or proposal.
What do you do?
- Downvote, as you disagree.
- Flag as Rude.
- Edit out the 2 impertinent words in their post.
- Make a quip based on the user's actions or choice of words.
- Vent your disagreement in comments.
- Answer the question, given it is in scope, if you have an answer.
The general response is a combination of 1 + 4 + 5.
I suggest 3 + 6 is a better response, with a preference for a constructive answer. "You're wrong for X, Y & Z reasons" is a valid answer, but qualify it with what can be done, if possible.
Now to the specific question:
What to do about good questions (ie. documentation-related) being closed too quickly
The questioner is clearly frustrated. He originally used scathing words such as "arrogant" and "vigilante" - but, in my opinion, pretty decent language versus what usually comes up in Meta.
The typical, upvoted answer, as in this case, answers his question and nothing more. Basically, he's wrong. For reasons W, X, Y & Z.
Well, who benefits from all this? We have another disgruntled user who gets told he's wrong. Great. Meta fraternity is happy to have dealt with another misguided user. Excellent, job well done.
We could kindly advise him that there's a dedicated section on SO (tag wikis) for collecting links to official documentation. Short and simple.
The purpose of this post is to promote discussion.
Should we look to help users who come to Meta as well as point out where they are wrong, or are we better off just chastising them.
Disclaimer: This is not an attack on any individuals who commented or posted an answer to this question. Their feedback is welcome as always.