Questions that start with "Is it possible…" and end with "…provide me with some starter/sample/example code" are pretty much guaranteed to get closed.
The only question is, which close reason will be used? There are three good candidates:
Too broad, on the grounds that a complete answer would be too long for our format, as it would essentially amount to a tutorial for the language/technology. That appears to be accurate in this case; the asker doesn't appear to know anything about Red, so a valid answer could not make any assumptions about their knowledge. That leads to an answer the length of a book.
Off-topic because it asks to recommend a tutorial/book/off-site resource, for much the same reasons. We either have to write a tutorial here (which is too broad), or we have to refer you to an external tutorial (and we don't do recommendations like that).
Off-topic because it lacks code (e.g., an MCVE) to contextualize the problem. This is the only closure reason that I could see as potentially invalid here (and it wasn't the one chosen). I include it in this list because it's a popular choice for "do this task for me" questions. Users on Stack Overflow are happy to help you implement something in code, but they generally deem code requests to be off-topic. Homework questions often get thrown into this category, but it's not just the fact that they're homework questions—it's that they're low-effort questions with absolutely no context, essentially demanding that others do work for them. Nobody likes being told what to do, especially when they're doing it for free. Showing what you have so far goes a long way towards both providing context and indicating that you're willing to do some of the work yourself.
If you think the question can be salvaged, then don't hesitate to propose an edit, even going so far as to completely rewrite it if necessary. Better to rewrite it and have it reopened than for it to sit around uselessly closed. After being edited, it will automatically be placed in a review queue where other users can assess whether it merits reopening.
(Well, not in this case. Only the first edit after closing is eligible to bump a question into the review queue, and that edit was already made.)