In many questions, the OP isn't asking the right question to solve their problem. Either they're only trying to address a symptom of the actual problem, or they've misdiagnosed the cause of a symptom and are trying to solve a problem that doesn't actually exist. I think it's natural that this happens; if they understood the situation well enough to ask exactly the right question, they might not need to ask one at all.
Sometimes their question is close enough to the real issue that gathering a little extra information from comments makes it possible to edit it so that it becomes the question they really need to ask. This is not what I'm asking about here.
I'm wondering what to do with the other times, when after the real issue is discovered it turns out that their question is so far off that a useful edit would basically be a completely new question.
- Should an edit that drastic be made so that the question can be answered (or quite possibly closed as a duplicate) or should I vote to close it as off-topic; no MCVE?
- Does the correct action depend on whether or not there are existing answers that would be invalidated by a drastic edit?
- Granted, answers to these types of questions usually aren't particularly valid to begin with.
I see that this may be a duplicate of A car with square wheels, although that seems to provide more guidance for answering (or not) XY problem questions, and I'm asking more specifically about what to do with the questions themselves.