It can be fine and on-topic. The devil is in the details, though.
It would depend on the specifics of the question, how is it framed, how much explaining the asker needs, how self-contained is the question, etc.
And many times it would end up being a duplicate anyway, since whatever one does not understand about some code is likely to be a more general principle/technique/pattern that has been already asked sometime before.
There is nothing inherently wrong in asking dupes, sometimes a dupe-link is all that is needed to help the asker and future readers.
I'm going to use two of your latest questions as examples for how this can play out specifically:
This question is fine. If an asker is not familiar with some of the places composer's autoloader might end up being used, this specific technique may look confusing. For many users the answer might be obvious after a bit of thought, but that's fine; not everybody is the same.
The answer this question got is short, descriptive and useful.
(As an aside, I would remove the first paragraph. It's completely besides the point. Sometimes your motivation can be relevant in a question, since they illuminate the direction an answerer might take to answer. In this case, it is just trivia; can be distracting and make the question look worse than actually is).
This is an example of one of the cases I mentioned earlier. This question can be answered very effectively by pointing users to general explanations about "What a Singleton is" and "How to implement the Singleton pattern in PHP". Once you are aware of that, it's obvious. This is just an example of that pattern and its application.
I do have some problems with this question. You seem to be already aware this is an example of the singleton pattern. You even tagged the question singleton. So it's not immediately clear exactly what are you asking here.
Is this a yes/no question? It just wants to confirm if this is a singleton or not? This doesn't make for a very interesting question, and as it is it's much too long and winded to simply ask that. Which you seem to have already gathered anyway.
Does the question ask why is the safeguard against multiple instantiation necessary? It seems like a strange question to me. Why do we use safe-guards and sanity-checks when programming? Because we are not in control of the client application that will use our code, nor the environment where our application. Again, this is not (IMO) a very interesting question, nor it is specific to the code you are trying to understand.
As it is, I believe the question is a dupe at best, and not a particularly good one.
(Another aside: again, you start with a paragraph that doesn't do any favours to your question: a link to question that's not relevant, general context that is not important to answer your question, a mention that you want to "extract principles, best-practices" which will predispose many users to think of your question as too-broad or opinion based although it is neither. Try put less commentary in your questions and focus on the specifics).
As you can see, there is no blanket "I need help to understand this code" rule. It will depend entirely about the question. It's like "are questions about debugging code OK?". Many times they are, many times they are not.