A more recent scenario has occurred in which these expanded powers could be considered valuable without conflating this with the venerable dupehammer. Perhaps this needs to be revisited?
I've had some time to think about this, and I've decided to loosen the original request up from 1 gold badge holder to 3 gold badge holders. Binding votes are definitely something we want to be sure are used only in certain situations, but I feel that if three gold badge holders agree that a question is only "why isn't this working", then it should be put on hold.
The original request is mostly intact below, although there may be references to the original "binding vote". Disregard those if you come across it; I'm going to claim that it's 3 gold badge holders now.
Scenario
A user posts a question which describes a generic exception that they're encountering without any code or the actual error message itself. Typically it reads something like this:
Loop not working
I'm supposed to write a for loop to count numbers, by 3, but it's not working. I think that it has to do with the variable I'm using, so I tried changing it and adding 2, but that didn't work. Could you please figure out why ?
Code omitted for brevity
This is a terrible sort of question for a few reasons:
- It's not clear as to what is wrong.
- It's not going to be terribly useful to anyone searching that sort of exception message, as the body of the question is sorely lacking in context.
Why not let only 3 gold badge holders be able to cast a close vote on questions of this sort?
Arguments for:
- Lets those that hold a gold badge in the tag close the question comparatively quickly to prevent half-complete or half-informed answers.
- Reduces the clutter and noise of questions of this sort, since a clear message is being sent to include all relevant information in their question.
- Allows a gold badge holder to instantly reopen a question that does provide this information, further promoting the true intent of question closure.
Arguments against:
- Gives gold badge holders even more power and authority which can be subject to abuse.
- Can be prone to misuse (e.g. a gold badge holder only closing a question with this reason because it's unclear, not because it's a "why isn't this code working" question)
- Will see a higher, biased usage in questions that directly deal with code, as opposed to those that don't (e.g. Git, CVS, Mercurial, etc).
To address the legitimate concern that this may be a slippery slope: yes, it is yet another privilege that gold badge holders gain for another arbitrary close reason. But, I'd like to clarify my stance on that.
Close as Duplicate serves as a signpost for users who were unaware that their question had already been asked, and has a good answer. Allowing insta-close only strengthens that signpost.
Putting "why isn't this code working" on hold would serve as a signpost for users who are unaware of the vagueness of their question, and give them a legitimate chance to fix their question. (Of course, they're still subject to gang downvoting, but there's not much one could do about that...)
My intention is to use this insta-close as a way to gently remind those who ask questions here that they need to be complete, and that the community does not enjoy grasping at straws or having long drawn "please post your code" comments with them.