Occasionally I see questions in which the asker provides "pseudo code" that is supposed to represent their problem but sometimes doesn't because its reduced form is too different from the original code base. While it is commendable that the OP is trying to avoid clutter (and code dumps) and reduce their problem to a minimalistic example, it can be annoying because it turns into a guessing game and egging the asker to edit their question until it reaches an answerable state. In particular, I can only think of two questions in recent memory:
Different classes that might be passed to constructor
c++ float subtraction rounding error
The first question, the OP originally posted no code. Then his edit contained an insignificant typo (indicating that it wasn't his real code.) Luckily the answerer was able to figure it out although the question as it stands I think is too vague. There are different approaches that may satisfy OP but just looking at the question you cannot formulate a specific answer.
The second question also doesn't contain real code (as admitted from the OP) and so it is impossible to reproduce his results and formulate a specific answer. While the commenters correctly directed the OP to floating point resources, the question as it stands still is not in an answerable state other than "go read how floating point numbers work" which makes it a duplicate.
What is the best way to handle this situation to minimize back and forth with OP?