IMHO, Poorly worded doesn't even begin to describe this question.
Questions like this should not be encouraged by answering them.
I mean, take a look at the screenshot you took, and imagine having no prior knowledge about this question. Can you even guess what the problem, or the error message is?
Questions should be self contained - meaning they should have a clear definition of the problem, if it's a question about code they should contain the minimal version of the code needed to replicate the problem (MCVE), and the error message, if there is one, should be included in the message body as text, not as an image.
They should also show the OP's (Original Poster) effort of solving the problem prior to asking the community's help.
A question like that should be flagged as very low quality (which you can do once you have at least 15 reputation points). Once you have 50 reputation points, You should also leave a comment on the question detailing the problems in the question to the OP.
I admit this is more a rule of thumb, and I've answered a few low quality questions myself, but it usually turns out to be a mistake. Some community members think they should downvote even good answers if the question is poor (I think they shouldn't - because I think that it is possible to post good, helpful answers to some law quality questions), and of course, there's always a chance that the question will be deleted either by a moderator or by the community itself (once you have 10,000 reputation points you can vote to delete/undelete questions; at 20,000 reputation you get expanded delete-/undelete-vote privileges).
So, to summarize: Answering such questions is a mistake. If you think the only thing wrong with a question is the way it's worded, you should first edit it, and only then answer. In this case, you might want to post a self answered question as noted by some of the comments to your question.
To address the conversation I've had with Servy in the comments - here is a detailed explanation of good, helpful answers to low quality questions:
I answer a lot of SQL questions, mainly SQL-Server related.
Most of the questions I see being asked lacks a mcve. A lot of people are posting their sample data in the form of a visual table, thinking (rightfully) that it's easy to read and understand.
However, when you want to answer such questions, you can't just copy and paste the sample data, and then use it as is to check your answer before posting.
What I do in cases like this, where the question itself is good but the sample data is malformed, (and as I wrote, it's very common) is to copy the sample data from the question, refactor it into DDL and DML, and incorporate that into my answer. So most of my SQL answers are built like this:
Explanation
Sample Data
SQL Statement
Results
Link to online demo
When I do post sample data, I start with the following sentence:
First, create and populate sample table (Please save us this step in your future questions):
Most of the time, especially if I actually helped to solve the problem, I get a response from the OP saying they will post sample data as DDL+DML in their next questions.
So this is an example of how a good answer can be helpful not only to future readers having similar problems, but to future questions posted by the same person.