The guidelines specify that we should "Search and Research" before asking a question. I recently asked a question which someone downvoted and voted to close. Their reason to close was "A community-specific reason," and they left no further explanation. I assume they were referencing the "Search and Research" section of the guidelines, as I had a slightly snarky comment in my example code (which I've edited) which essentially says that I feel like it's more research than I have time for.
So, at what point is asking someone to "search and research" too much?
A couple of quick contrived examples:
Obviously we wouldn't expect someone new to programming to spend months learning the basics of programming, learning what the stack is, learning about heap memory, etc., just for them to realize that calling a recursive function in an infinite loop will cause a stack overflow.
Contrarily, we would probably expect someone learning the Discord API to read the documentation to see that, to create a new emoji, one must upload the image binary in data URI format in a string in a JSON object. And even that might be a bit too harsh to expect of them.
In any case, I'm just curious where that line is drawn.