Here is the close reason we all know:
This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.
Increasingly I'm seeing questions which are caused by the mental version of a typographical error. In other words, whereas a typo is caused by twitchy keyboard fingers, I am talking about things caused by twitchy brain cells.
There are many better examples out there but here's one I just ran into, where the user initialized a variable outside instead of inside the loop.
I've already been voting to close some of these with the "typo" reason, but feeling slighty guilty as I did so since they are not technically "typos", unless one expands the definition of "typo" to include putting two lines in the wrong order, or putting a ++
after the variable instead of before. Yet these questions have in common with real typos the fact that the resolution is unlikely to help future readers etc. The titles are almost never good descriptions of the problems and unlikely to bring someone to the question when searching, since they are usually of the form "Blah blah is not working".
How about changing this close reason to read:
This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical or trivial logical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.
Note: This is distinct from Where did "too localized" go?, which is about the "too localized" close reason, which was thought by some to be too broad or subject to abuse.
or
should be a comma, and there should be a comma before the secondor
.trivial logical error
, I am not so sure thattrivial
is correct semantically, it could be replaced with a more semantically applicable adjective likecareless
,inattentive
... and many other generic adjectives that all end up being just synonyms fortoo localized
but assign blame. Sohighly localized logic error
would be more correct in all these cases and then we are back tooff-topic: too localized
which was deemed confusing, mean spirited, etc. in the past, thus thetypo
close reason we have now replaces it in spirit at least.