The phrase "insufficient information to diagnose problem" means exactly what it says, but it's actually a symptom of a larger problem.
First of all, can we all agree that the purpose of closing is to prevent answers from being posted while the OP improves their question? If there's never any negative consequences for posting bad questions, then what stops people from posting whatever they want?
Now then...
Scenario One
- User posts incomplete question.
- Comments come in asking for more information. Meanwhile, the post gets closed.
- OP gets frustrated and either starts a meta conversation below the answers, accuses us of being mean, complains on meta, and/or (maybe about 5 percent of the time) improves their question.
- Question is abandoned.
- We're all sad.
Scenario Two
- User posts (mostly) complete question, but leaves out a few details
- Comments come in asking for clarification. OP provides it, in a timely manner.
- Post may or may not attract some downvotes/close votes
- Question is answered.
- Profit!
Which is the better scenario?
Here's my point. The closing system is not the problem. It never was. Those who think the closing system should be streamlined in favor of the 5% that might get around to improving their question are looking at the wrong thing.
What do we tell folks? Improve their question, so that it can be reopened. That's the truth. But the long term solution rests with new users: learn how to ask better questions.
then get the user to understand that they have to edit, then mark the question for reopening
The close notice itself already says "If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question or leave a comment." If a user doesn't bother to read that, what else can you do?most users don't improve their questions
Agreed. I don't want them to remain open, too. So I guess simply closing and let the user decide wether they are ready to work on it later.