I would like to spend just a few words on this question.
Where is the <kbd> tag in the guidelines
The question was downvoted since the readers thought it was showing a lack of effort. The comment from the opener, in my opinion, showed this to be an hurried hypothesis. Human are hurried and subjective. We are always interpreting and judging the reality. And, for sure, we can make mistakes.
But the main point is that the answer is really interesting. In particular the last part
Stack Overflow, as the editing help suggests, supports a strict subset of HTML. The < kbd> element is standard HTML markup.
Now I wonder, what is the main purpose of SO? Trying to classify question in good and bad?
Or trying to spread knowledge?
I see here very low quality questions, really lacking of any effort. Why not trying to distinguish to really bad questions and questions which are leading to an Information Gain?
Again. Have a fast look at what Stack Overflow was writing: link to SO official blog article
This is a sentence taken from that article:
Because we believe so deeply in learning, we are willing to go to great lengths to suppress the discussion, debate, and opinions that — while plenty entertaining — cause most forums to inevitably break down.
It doesn't says: since we believe so much in classifying good questions. Neither it says: "we believe in punishing who opens bad questions. It says: "to achieve the objective of spreading knowledge we have to discourage behavior which are against this objective".
When a question which had been voted to be closed gets a very interesting answer (upvoted). Every vote to close proves, for definition, to be harmful against the main purpose of this community: getting good answer.
So, let me a provocation, why don't we punish this low level contribution (downvotes and votes to close)?