"Can you help me?" may be indicative of an unanswerable question, but it is not necessarily so.
People often seem to be blinded by the "ask an (actual) question" mentality and downvote and close perfectly appropriate questions that only have some less-than-ideal phrasing.
In many cases, it's trivial to convert a "Can you help me?" question into an "actual" question (whether that question would be appropriate is a different issue).
Taking your example:
I'm trying to convert a string to a number. Can anyone help me?
versus
How do I convert a string to a number?
The asker appears to want exactly the same thing in each case, the phrasing is just a little different.
Even if there isn't such an easy fix, it's often easy to see what the asker wants and add an "actual" question (although not necessarily an appropriate one, of course).
If it's really easy to "fix" with an edit (which I often do), it's definitely not something you should be downvoting or closing a question over.
Be optimistic. Try your best to see what the asker wants and edit the question into something appropriate, if at all possible.
To this end, I also propose we favour actually explaining what's wrong with the question as a whole as opposed to fixating on "Can you help me". For example, if someone says:
I can't get the correct answer with my code. Can you help me?
with no description of the output or any errors, one can also get rid of "Can you help me" as described above, although the end result is still a terrible question:
How do I get the correct answer with my code?
A much better comment in such cases would be:
Do you get any errors when trying to compile or run your code? If yes, can you post the exact error message? If no, what output are you getting? Can you also post the output you're expecting?
Alternatively or additionally, simply close it using the "debugging help" close reason.
Simply linking here DOES NOT HELP - at best it gives some vague guidelines for what a good question should look like (which can be found in the help center as well), where concrete guidance specific to their situation would be much more beneficial to them (in my opinion). They'll probably ignore it anyway, but there's presumably a slightly greater chance that they won't.
If you happen to find yourself in the middle of a discussion of whether "Can someone help me?" is an 'actual' question, then I'd agree that linking here makes sense, but I'd argue that bringing this up smells of unnecessary nitpicking (unless it was done as just a note as part of an edit) - I'm not all that concerned with a user asking a question containing all the "bad" phrases like "Hi. My name is ...", "I'm new here", "I don't know what to do", "Can you help me" and "Thanks in advance" (despite obsessively editing them out of posts), as long as the rest of the post clearly describes the problem.
Don't focus on the definition of an "actual" question, which can just be confusing and lead to a question that's still not any better. Instead, lead posters towards the actual question they meant to ask and point out the details necessary for that question (or just close it as unclear or too broad if it's not salvageable).
That's not at all to say this thread in itself isn't useful - the more agreed-upon guidelines we have, the better. It's more the unqualified linking here that I have a problem with.