I'd like to give my answer to What to do with debug questions now? its own feature request.
There are plenty of questions that just gives a massive amount of code and should be closed for this reason (while not all questions giving a massive amount of code are necessarily bad, most are) (which I hope you agree with).
There isn't really an applicable close reason for these as far as I can see - some argue the "minimal understanding" reason applies here, but I don't see it as "asking for code" (and regardless of whether or not you agree or manage to convince me otherwise, there shouldn't have to be any convincing taking place, it should be completely clear). I guess I could use a custom reason, but I'd prefer a standard one.
So, since the "describe the specific problem" reason already includes a link to SSCCE.org, I suggest we incorporate the "short" part into our close reason.
As an initial draft, change it from:
Questions concerning problems with code you've written must describe the specific problem — and include valid code to reproduce it — in the question itself. See SSCCE.org for guidance.
to:
Questions concerning problems with code you've written must describe the specific problem — and include a short, valid, complete program that reproduces it — in the question itself. See SSCCE.org for guidance.
(bold is just to indicate the change, not what should be made bold in the final product).
If the "a complete program" would be considered abusable, what about: (thanks to djechlin for pointing out "concise" - it's way better than "short" when talking about code)
Questions concerning problems with code you've written must describe the specific problem — and include concise, valid code that reproduces it — in the question itself. See SSCCE.org for guidance.
Some may say that a short program is not always possible. If this is generally agreed, perhaps:
Questions concerning problems with code you've written must describe the specific problem — and include the shortest possible, valid, complete program that reproduces it — in the question itself. See SSCCE.org for guidance.
Which could, in theory, again be dangerous ("voting to close because of all those line breaks spacing out your code"). If it is, perhaps:
Questions concerning problems with code you've written must describe the specific problem — and include a valid, complete program, that's not excessively long, that reproduces it — in the question itself. See SSCCE.org for guidance.
Anyway, those are just a few ideas. Feel free to suggest / change it to something better.