tl;dr: What do we do with comments asking a user to fix their question, when "fixing their question" is impossible?
For context: https://stackoverflow.com/q/54316816/1079354 (10k only)
(I may be talking a lot about the question, but I really want to focus in on the comments.)
This question has a few glimmers of hope in which it could have been okay in some context:
- It has an easily defined problem statement.
- Code is accessible and made apparent for the actual problem.
However, the problem with this question is simple: it lacks clarity on what the actual problem really is. That is to say, we don't have enough context into the actual issue to determine if an answer we provide would be addressing a symptom, or addressing the actual problem. Therefore, we can't reasonably answer it, and closure is an appropriate moderation action on it.
As an analogy, think of someone asking you in person how to address a leak with their kitchen sink. You could suggest putting a bucket underneath the pipes, or tell them to cut the flow of water off to the sink so that it stops pouring water over the edge. Only one answer addresses a root cause, but the latter answer requires way more additional context.
It's easy to see how a question like this would be "dead-on-arrival". There's not much in the way of editing that would really satisfy us here (and if there is I'd love to know), since the real issue is one of, "Yeah, I see that this variable is out of scope, but...what else is going on? What are you not telling me?"
The crux of my issue is that the comments don't motivate salvation here.
I encounter this pattern a lot on the site, in which people who do mean well on Stack Overflow make a comment to encourage the OP to include more details, when doing so is simply a fool's errand. The solution for this problem (from the perspective of an expert) is simple: a variable is out of scope, and this is likely a typo which can be resolved without a question here.
I don't think we can stop the questions that come in like this; the only thing we can do is move swiftly to close them. What I'm concerned about is what we do with those comments. How do we address that?