I've been thinking about this lately as well. @Makoto points out good points in their answer: there are a lot of (transient) rules, both written and unwritten, and not only askers but also answerers do not know what rule set is currently valid and actively enforced.
So while you're trying to educate a user for why their question isn't particularly good, in the meantime another user will make an (un)educated guess and post an answer to the unclear, too broad or off-topic question. And that makes me a sad panda.
The goal of the site is and has always been to provide a repository of clear, concise, definitely answerable questions. Not "I want a program to do X, Y and Z, give me code, now.". I don't think we can re-educate the entire existing internet population of inexperienced developers that this site is not there for them to get their questions answered. We cannot let them realise that their answers are already here, but that they'll have to work for it. Search, research, read, try, debug.
It's basic skills that they lack, so they will not be able to figure out their problem on their own, so they need help, and quick.
So what you seem to be looking for, namely an exhaustive list of "What questions can I ask here", is not going to solve anything, because askers and answerers alike are going to ignore it.
What we can try, is re-evaluate whether the original purpose of the site is still valid, and whether the currently active rules (both written and living in the minds of users) still work together towards that goal. And if so, whether those rules are clear, fair, concise and available to everyone in one page.
One solution would be to be more strict. Use more punishing (example: answering a question that gets closed as a duplicate quickly after? You actually lose reputation, for not searching). Ask a certain amount of questions that get closed as duplicate? Get a "learn to search"-ban. In general, ban more freely and longer (a string of users who persistently post poor questions that I've reported over the last couple of months simply continue the same way after their ban is lifted, but then they ignore my comments or delete their question if they've seen me). Exclude certain IP address ranges.
But that won't necessarily improve the popularity of the site, and I'm absolutely not pleading for the pedantic paradise where everyone is living in the "utopia" where rules are king, where users are second-class citizens and where every new question has actually already been answered or is unclear or too broad. That would be boring.
What I would like to see is that the existing users put less emphasis on reputation and helping people and more application and evaluation of the relevant rules, because those were created to facilitate building a great collection of questions and answers that apply way more broadly than "Halp my code broke". One comment asking an insightful question can provide more enlightenment than a "Here, I fixed your code"-answer that sets the asker on fire.
So: downvote and close-vote more freely. Comment before answering if you see gaps in a question. Try to find a duplicate before starting to type an answer. Don't pity-upvote.
As long as there are users who try to answer every question they can, without evaluating that question's use for the site and future visitors (as opposed to working together to building better canonical Q&As, closing off crap and editing posts), you don't stand a chance, and all of your comments criticizing any question or answer are open for abuse by the OP and like-minded individuals. Because "you're being the boogeyman, and other users are way nicer because they answer my question without complaining that it sucks".
If you've got the feeling that you're fighting alone, you've already lost.