Over the past week, I've made several fairly significant changes to the close reasons and associated documentation on Stack Overflow. I've been monitoring and tweaking those changes, and believe they should now be reasonably stable; so here is a summary of the currently-available close reasons, with changes and their rationale noted.
Background
In June 2013, we made a major set of changes to the reasons available for closing questions. As a result of these changes, several very heavily-used reasons were significantly narrowed in scope or no longer available at all. Simultaneously, the scope of the Off Topic reason was expanded to include site-specific reasons that could be used to provide specific guidance for common misconceptions regarding a site's scope... Or fill in the gaps left by the changes to the other close reasons.
At launch, I created and added a set of predefined off-topic reasons for every Stack Exchange site, including Stack Overflow. SO presented some unique challenges due to its size and history: in many cases, the usage of existing close reasons had deviated significantly from their original intent. So I spent a lot of time sampling actual closed questions and attempting to classify the problems underlying them before proposing an initial set of off-topic reasons. I noted at the time that I would try to revise them based on how they were actually used after the changes went live.
Over the months that followed, it became apparent that two of those off-topic reasons were particularly unclear: the one intended for debugging questions lacking in code, and the one intended for homework / assignment dumps lacking any clear understanding of the question (or lacking a question entirely). These problems were discussed extensively in the following threads:
Improving "demonstrate a minimal understanding" close reason
Questions .. must describe the specific problem and include valid code to reproduce it
Top-level changes: "unclear what you're asking"
This is the only top-level close reason to see changes at this time. Adjusting the wording of top-level close reasons isn't easy: they instantly apply to every site, so tailoring them to a specific audience isn't really feasible. I've attempted to work around this by deferring specific guidance to a site-specific /help page:
unclear what you're asking
Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question.
That last sentence is the addition here. The page it links to is customized to Stack Overflow, and currently being revised and discussed here: Can we create a Help Center topic that outlines what a SSCCE / MWE means for Stack Overflow?
This close reason should cover the bulk of what was being legitimately closed for "minimal understanding". Questions where...
- ...No specific problem is identified
- ...A specific scenario or set of requirements are described, but the asker fails to identify what he wants as a result of this.
- ...The wording or formatting is so poor as to make reading the question exceptionally difficult.
Off-topic reason changes
As noted, two off-topic reasons were removed. As of today, two new ones have been added:
Typos and "the problem went away" questions
These questions are often resolved by correcting a simple syntax error or by the asker himself after realizing he was looking at the wrong code, forgot to restart the server, etc. They tend to be an embarrassment to the asker and a source of unhelpful noise for others with superficially-similar problems:
This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.
Note that the original wording proposed for this reason has been tweaked several times in response to confusion observed here on Meta and on Stack Overflow itself. The target remains the same though: "face-palm" problems that no longer affect the asker and whose solutions will never benefit anyone else.
Debugging question missing crucial information
This question appears to be off-topic because it lacks sufficient information to diagnose the problem. Describe your problem in more detail or include a minimal example in the question itself.
This addresses a specific subset of "unclear what you're asking" questions, so I originally omitted it to see how often its absence made things difficult for either closers or askers. It didn't take long; this is a very common problem, so calling it out directly and offering specific guidance is well-worth chewing up an extra slot in the list. Note that this is very similar to one of the removed off-topic reasons.
A note on SSCCE
One of the reoccurring complaints with the old off-topic reasons was the reference to http://sscce.org/. While a very nicely-written and information-rich resource, it wasn't specific to Stack Overflow and the wording of the close reason subtly implied that including such code was a requirement for asking a question, which was never the intent of the page's author. As a result, both of the new off-topic reasons reference a Stack Overflow-specific help page, and attempt to cast it as a useful resource for helping others reproduce your problem and not a laundry-list of additional hard requirements.
A note on Effort
There were a handful of people who interpreted "minimal understanding" as a euphemism for "visible effort" or even "a wall of code". That was never the intent, as it's never been something I've observed as a widespread implicit requirement on Stack Overflow: a clearly-written, reasonably-scoped, answerable programming question should strive to include as much information as necessary and no more; doing otherwise is a much more frequent source of frustration. You can find extensive discussion on this topic here: Should Stack Exchange in general be awarding "A"s for Effort?
In closing
I apologize for any confusion generated by these changes; unfortunately, it can be hard to stay agile on a site as large as Stack Overflow, where every change is guaranteed to make someone's life harder. As the many meta discussions over the past months demonstrate, a review of close reasons has been long overdue; I sincerely believe the eventual results of these changes will be easier for all involved in the long-term, but I will try to do a better job of responding more quickly to complaints or confusion going forward.
icanhazcode
questions still Too Broad? See meta.stackexchange.com/a/216577line-height
tweak to the.action-list .action-name
span would do the trick. i.imgur.com/Q4iYxSS.gif