Apologies for a long story. I have been commenting fragments of my thoughts about this for too long now, it's time I put it to an answer.
From my perspective, the problem here is that this is something the community at large is completely divided about and there is also a bit of financial considerations involved here that muddies the waters. Questions are traffic, after all. Outlawing entire subjects which are very popular is not good for business. What subjects? Well. SQL. CSS. HTML. Regex. And yes, maybe SED and AWK too, in part. I'm sure there are a few more tags that can be added to the list, but these come up frequently.
These tags have many unofficial names. They have been called "send-me-teh-codez" tags right here in the comments and there is a hint of truth to that, I like to call them not-exactly-programming tags or a variation thereof. Tags that don't really mesh with the goals of the site but they're deemed on-topic nonetheless because they're involved in the programming world. But that does sort of make them the ugly duckling in this site which is by it's own admission strictly aimed at programming problems.
And then you have for example CSS questions. Gigantic piles of CSS questions, people have built empires on them. And what questions are they usually? "I need to render this on the page so and so but I don't know exactly how to get it done". The answers, often, are code-only. Just the CSS and maybe a bit of HTML to demonstrate how to do what is requested. All the mentioned tags follow this pattern. The questions are not truly programming questions most of the time, they are more questions that ask about how to get a certain result. Basically, people ask for code.
Now if you pose such questions to meta: red alert. All the rules are being broken, how can such things go under the radar!? Why are such questions not downvoted, close voted, duplicate closed and/or burned?
Well - because the people who answer questions under such tags do not agree with you. They happily answer any and all request for help, provide answers that on the surface appear to help only one person. They do not duplicate close and will likely upvote far more than they downvote. How terrible right? A whole subcommunity of people that go against the grain and just play fast and loose with the site rules. They're feeding the help vampires and answering the low effort questions.
Yeah well I don't actually believe that, at least not anymore. These people instead, know better. After years and years of focussing mostly on backend development, I did a project which required modern frontend techniques. So I learned Angular and I dove into modern CSS developments, learning about flex box and CSS grid and learned about reactive design. CSS and HTML are fully specced technologies and in this day and age pretty universally applicable across all browsers. Yet I had the greatest trouble to get a simple form to behave the way I wanted it to on different screen sizes. It didn't size the way I wanted it to, it didn't wrap the way I wanted it to, it didn't space the way I wanted it to, it didn't align the way I wanted it to, etc. etc. I read the specs. I read articles. I saw dozens of youtube videos. I referenced dozens and dozens of CSS questions on Stack Overflow. "How do I get this output?" questions with code-only answers.
Not a single one was a solution for me but they were all massively useful to me. It was never the case that I could be helped by one Stack Overflow question or one youtube video that showed how to generically apply these CSS techniques, I needed the combined efforts of many resources to solve all the nitty gritty problems I had. Because when it comes to the more content-oriented subjects, the devil is in the details. You can have two answers which differ only by 2 characters and still be 100% different answers solving 100% different problems. In the end I did not have to only fix my CSS, but also redo some of the HTML markup to allow CSS to do it's job more properly. Good luck finding that in the specs or in a tutorial. The only way I got it done was by seeing the examples in numerous CSS questions that sort of matched my problem description and finding the combination of factors that was the winner for me just be sheer experimentation.
Thank god those questions were answered rather than dupe-closed because something else looked similar.
And thank god for Stack Overflow allowing in CSS questions, because having to use Youtube to figure this stuff out is a bloody time consuming nightmare.
So what can we do? The answer to me is simple: don't be so strict with the rules when it comes to not-strictly-programming tagged questions. Don't be so eager to duplicate close them. code-only answers are usually fine. They certainly helped me a whole lot!
BUT. I can't fault people for applying the tools as the site presents them in the way that is documented for them to be used. In the end it's just a pretty shitty situation that there are whole subjects of questions represented by these tags that are allowed in and then at the same time are pretty much rejected by the site's rules for what they represent, and thus also by the people that try to do the best they can by following the rules as honestly as they can. Nobody really did anything strictly wrong in this scenario, every choice and opinion voiced and executed upon can be defended. There is no consensus. When there is no consensus, there is no reliable way a question will be treated. Sometimes (often?) the tag community gets its way in the way they want it, sometimes they are overruled.
So yeah, this question's duplicate closure marks the situation settled. Some people will claim a victory, others a loss. Who is right and who is wrong? I'd be mighty interested to see an official statement about that, because the denizens of Stack Overflow are not going to solve that riddle.