While the Stackoverflow FAQ advises questions to be crafted describing specific problems, I can't help but to notice that many or not most of the highest voted questions are vague and at best generic.
Here's an example (I note that it is an old question, however, and might not reflect guidelines). What is a metaclass in Python?
Also, many of them have been closed due to the quality of question, but because they are generic, they get a lot of hits from searches and page view and naturally very high in votes.
So here's my contemplation. Should I make my questions more generic and less specific so it appeals to more people? In other words, keeping the scope of my question wider so that it can potentially help more people - or should I avoid the risk of getting slammed in down votes and flags and just be very specific, assuming in both cases the question is not a duplicate and is well written.
Update
To better explain my dilemma, say I was about to post a question on a stored procedure issue that I am facing. If I were to put a code dump and be very specific, someone might be able to help me resolve in code level. However if I choose to make it language-independent and ask on a high level on the concepts of stored procedure, it might potentially reach more people who has similar issues on different database systems, and I would still be able to extrapolate the answer that I need with some experimenting.