Using stackoverflow has become a run against time: will I get an answer to my question before five close votes are in?
My latest question How to feed contents of a "shebang" file into the program it invokes? was about interaction between a C or C++ program and the operating system. Within minutes, I got two answers. Each of them fully answered my question, and thereby helped me enormously in my work.
Since then my question received four 'close' votes without any further explanation. All votes were of category 'off topic' ('does not appear to be about programming'), subcategory 'Questions seeking debugging help'.
I'd say, something is broken in the social mechanism when questions get closed because a few people understand them wrongly.
To me it seems perfectly clear that my question was about 'programming', but not about 'debugging'. My question was basically: How do I feed information from process A into process B. Then I elaborated: Currently, B reads from stdin; this seems to be the wrong approach; how shall I proceed instead.
The 'debugging' close-reason category says: 'must include ... the shortest code necessary to reproduce ...'. With my question, it would have been ridiculous to submit sample code of B when all was said with 'reads from stdin'. Which shows how inadequate the close reason was.