I get voted-to-close with reason "too broad" on yes/no questions and so forth.
Yes/no questions are by their very nature likely to be too broad.
Example: "I'd like to flibble the foo. Is it possible?"
Is this person really expecting an answer that will simply be "yes" without an explanation how to do it? Or "no" without an explanation why it is not possible? Probably not, and as a matter of practice users of SO will interpret such question instead as "How can I flibble the foo? If I can't to this, then why not?" You won't find a rule that spells this out but this is the custom, because if we did not do this, then we'd have to add a close reason to flat out close "yes/no" questions.
If the answer is "no" then perhaps one can make the case that the answer is not too broad. There may be just one salient reason why it can't be done, and all answers would be merely restating the same reason in different words.
However, if the answer is "yes" then how should the answer be framed? If the OP cannot flibble the foo, is it because the OP has a problem with the language? Is it because the OP does not know how to flibble? Is it because the OP is approaching the foo incorrectly? Is it an issue with logic? I've seen such questions get a bunch of answers, only for the OP to comment on all answers that they are not actually answering the actual problem the OP was having. This is why "yes/no" questions are often closed as too broad.
cp
question. Simply reading the man pages for the relevant functions would show the mistake. – nobody Oct 14 '14 at 16:12