[This is, I admit, more of a comment on another answer than it is an answer to the original question. But it's way too long for a comment.]
In another answer, @MadConan offered a hypothetical "non-specific" conversation in a doctor's office:
Patient: Doctor, I'm in pain.
Doctor: What's seems to be the problem?
Patient: It hurts.
Doctor: Where does it hurt?
Patient: My body.
Doctor: Where exactly on your body?
Patient: My knee.
...
And then, by contrast, he offered a "more specific" alternative:
Patient: Doctor, last week I was running when suddenly I felt this sharp pain in my left knee and now it's difficult to walk. The pain is very sharp but only occurs when I put weight on it.
Doctor: Sounds like...
And, finally, he offered the opinion that
I don't know about anyone else, but I feel the latter scenario is far preferable...
So I'll bite, and be the "anyone else", and offer a dissenting opinion.
The former, "nonspecific" conversation is just like the ones that happen every single day in every doctor's office anywhere in the world. It's a perfectly normal Q&A. The latter, "efficient" conversation, on the other hand, has never happened and probably never will. It's so implausible, so unlikely to succeed, that I can't agree it's preferable.
To see why, let's first revisit an old joke. A hungry Stack Overflow regular walks into a Burger King. Wanting to be "efficient", he launches into the following dialog, which doesn't quite play out as intended:
Regular: I'd like a Whopper, to go, hold the tomatoes.
Clerk: You'd like a Whopper?
Regular: Yes, please, to go.
Clerk: You want everything on that?
Regular: Hold the tomatoes.
Clerk: For here or to go?
Regular (exasperated): To go.
So the attempt to be "efficient" backfires, and all the information has to be transmitted twice, because the initial presentation was too fast, and in the wrong order, and before the clerk was ready to receive it.
This is far from a perfect analogy, but there are several things to take away from it:
- The regular broke the rules. He didn't follow the script. (That's kind of the lesson we keep trying to teach the newbies.)
- There was a wide gulf in sophistication. The regular wanted to be savvy, and tried to present a large amount of information at once. The clerk was being mundane and slow, one thing at a time. On Stack Overflow the roles are usually reversed, but any time you have a large "impedance mismatch" between sender and receiver, you're unlikely to be able to transfer a large amount of information, in one step function, without some ringing.
- It's actually okay for there to be some Q&A. There's no reputation bonus for the smallest number of back-and-forth interactions before a question is answered.
My point is that while it's certainly important for posters to provide all the relevant information, we really don't want them providing lots of irrelevant information. (That's why we ask them to strip their code down to just the bit that has the problem, rather than presenting their whole program.) But -- and this is a very big, very important "but" -- beginners who ask questions are never going to be able to do a perfect job discriminating between relevant and irrelevant information. They're always going to post irrelevant information, and they're always going to leave out relevant information. Expecting them to always do a perfect job discriminating relevancy is tantamount to asking them to know so much about the subject that they'd be able to answer all their own questions, which would kind of defeat the whole point of setting up a Q&A website in the first place.
Exasperating as it certainly can be for questioners to keep asking malformed questions that we can't necessarily immediately answer, that phenomenon is: inevitable. It's human nature. It's going to happen, and it's going to keep happening. It's never going to get any better. Attempts to "fix" this problem, by erecting all sorts of unnatural rules that new posters are expected to follow, or by browbeating the ones who don't, are not going to work.