While reviewing the Close vote queue today, I ran across a question that I answered myself a couple of months ago. Pre-Meta Effect, the question has been flagged by four different users as "unclear what you're asking".
The description for that close reason states:
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.
Obviously, since there is an accepted answer, someone (in this case, me; in other cases I've seen, other posters) has been able to understand "exactly what you're asking" and provide an accepted solution. Given that, does this close reason actually apply here?
I'm fairly new to this queue, and I was already wondering this before I ran across the post I linked here. I've been skipping over them in the review queue, since I didn't have a settled opinion, but now would like to know if there is a community consensus. My question isn't really about the specifically linked item, either - that was just the catalyst that made me ask about the close reason.
TL;DR
Should we vote-to-close questions with accepted answers with the close reason "unclear what you're asking"?
Possibly related, but at best a secondary question - is there any benefit in leaving hard-to-understand-but-successfully-understood questions open to improve the chances of other, equally hard-to-understand users with similar problems have of finding / using them?