Sometimes, meta posts where OP behave "irrationally" gets closed as "not seeking discussions".
What's the purpose of such closures?
- Before or after the closure, it remains possible to discuss... through the comment. Except that it's terribly hard to read and format properly, no proper voting system, as well as the 600 character limit of comments.
- To inform the OP that they should not ask such questions? It's possible to just do that in comments.
And...
- If the actual issue has been discussed before in meta, it's simpler to just close as duplicate.
- Otherwise, it might be a new, actual issue that deserves an answer. Even though it may not help the OP, it will help future visitors (if they can find the question at all... meta is hard to search), and someone might post a different answer that the OP accepts.
Related questions~
- Is "does not appear to seek input and discussion" applicable because of comments?
Can we update the "rant" close reason to link to how to *constructively* conduct criticisms of Stack Overflow?
Can we slow down on the deletes on Meta, folks? - Why does meta have a downvote option at all
Why do we vote on meta posts? Measuring community feeling?
Remark: this meta question comes from this specific meta question
To explain on my comment there (and also "what I could post as an answer"):
In that case (only) I think that none of the correctly addresses the issue (not really their fault, OP didn't explain the situation clearly either). The actual issue is
- The error is very generic (server is not running / the executable is not found) and the answer depends a lot on the environment
- Without specific details on the environment, answerers can only guess.
- These questions are highly popular, so it doesn't seem like a good idea to just close them, like what meta questions linked below suggests.
Then
- Someone get that error message, and several other error messages.
- By trial and error (that took them a few hours), they figured out a solution that is not included in any existing answers.
- They're not quite sure whether that solution applies to the specific question, because of the reason explained above.
- They can't make the answer question-specific, because they don't know why the answer works (nor they understand the root cause of the issue), only that it seems to work in their particular case.
Surely the policy of not posting duplicate answer makes sense, and mods aren't necessarily subject expert.
But it's true that in this case having the answer somehow on the page will help (a bit...) some particular future users.
What would be the best thing to happen?
Some subject expert posts a comprehensive answer that explains (almost) every possible causes that may create the issue, and how to diagnose the issue.
What could the user do?
In my opinion, posting one answer and leave comments like "Same error, different cause, see also [other_question]" on the others is the best way.
Reference: