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This question in the review queue clearly asks multiple questions at the end, so I flagged it as 'Needs More Focus', as "The question currently includes multiple questions in one. It should focus on one problem only." But I appeared to have failed the audit.

It says "keeping in mind the guidance above" but did not provide any guidance or explanation as to why my action was inappropriate (this appears to have been an issue before).

I don't understand why I didn't pass. Could someone please explain it to me?

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    Because currently, the question doesn't have any downvotes and no close votes, thus the system assumes it's a "good question".
    – Andrew T.
    Commented Nov 2, 2021 at 6:51
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    The question seems a bit borderline, but not really bad imo. While the question 1, question 2 and question 3 at the end make it seem like multiple questions, the question essentially is: "what does this change mean and why was it made?". That still seems like 2 questions, but it's no more 2 questions than "why am I getting this error and how do I fix it?", the questions are so strongly related that it's fine to ask them both imo
    – Erik A
    Commented Nov 2, 2021 at 9:14
  • It lacks focus. (What is its question? It is not 1 question.)
    – philipxy
    Commented Nov 3, 2021 at 0:03
  • Please use text, not images, for what can be given in text.
    – philipxy
    Commented Nov 3, 2021 at 0:06

1 Answer 1

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Just the fact that a question contains multiple questions or multiple question marks does not mean it should be closed and/or split up.

Especially questions about language design, but also questions like "Is this the way to do this? Or can I improve it by fooing the bar?" (that's two questions for who's keeping count) can actually benefit from having all related doubts listed together, so an answerer can pick any starting point and work their way to a complete answer to all separate (but related!) questions.

If the questions are unrelated ("How can I generate an email message with plaintext and HTML?" and "How can I send an .eml file through GMail?" are entirely unrelated questions), then sure, closing (or commenting) might be the way to go.

The question you show contains very related questions about the specific implementation of a particular language design detail. It's fine.

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