For on-topic, non-duplicate questions, Paulie_D's answer is perfectly correct. No need to close a question just because the answer isn't what the OP was hoping for.
However, don't take that to mean you should forgo closing an off-topic question just because you can answer with "This is impossible." No matter what the question is, or how easy to answer or interesting it is, if the question is off-topic for the site, it should be closed and not answered.
For the questions you're talking about with your example, they could very easily be unclear:
I want to assign a value using only CSS and no Javascript.
That question, for instance, would be unclear. A value to what, exactly? Granted, that's not what CSS is for, so the answer is easy and quick regardless of what they want to assign a value to. But the question still fits the "unclear" close reason, and should be closed rather than answered.
Questions like the example in Paulie_D's answer are good, on-topic questions, however. You shouldn't try to force a close reason on a question if it doesn't fit. Answers saying you can't do something and showing you a different way to handle what you want are great and useful. Not to mention that, as mentioned in BSMP's comment there could come a day (or a change in technology) where what the OP wants to do is suddenly possible with the tools they wish to use. Closing a good, on-topic question about it prevents new solutions available due to changes in technology from being posted.