I'm relatively new to SO so please bear with me. I've searched SO Meta for an answer to this question I'm having and haven't found one, so here I go.
I've had the same problem several times:
- I see a badly-worded or bizarre question, unclear on the first read;
- I read it one (or two) more times carefully, or just let it sink in, and then there's a "oh, I get it" moment - the true meaning shines through;
- I see from comments that the question is likely to be voted-to-close and that the asker is unable to explain him/herself, either because of a lack of communication skills in English, or because the question is a bit strange or tricky to explain.
To be clear: it's not a "maybe that's the meaning, I'll have a shot" cases, it's strong "oh, I get it" cases.
Then it's a race:
Try to answer the question as it stands, but the question is likely to be closed before I can type the answer
Try to edit it, but the edit has to be reviewed (when not enough rep), so it will probably be visible to late
Do nothing and just watch the poor guy bashed into the ground because many readers misunderstand his question, and it's closed as "unclear" or "duplicate" in a few minutes.
One the question is closed, time has passed; there are a lot less eyes on it as in the first minutes (I guess), so a re-opening vote is hard to obtain. You see the names of the voters-to-close, but I didn't find an easy way to reach them (comments ? how ?) to notify them of an edit, for instance.
So, what to do? What I'm dreaming of is a kind of "Wait, I get it!" button when a question has been VTC. It could involve a penalty if you're wrong, and a time limit, but it's for the case when you're confident enough to answer or edit, and ready to take responsibility if you're wrong.
Maybe it's just a problem when you don't have enough rep, with enough rep do you have other means to act on a question?
EDIT:
The most voted answer starts with "don't answer unclear questions", so clearly there's a need to clarify what unclear means :-)
I don't want to answser questions that are unclear to me. For example, I want to answer questions that are strange on first sight but are making sense when you're looking at them the right way. Once you strip away the strangeness, the rest can become trivial. Not english grammar problems, but fuzzier problems that the answer is sorting, but can't be put in an edit without distording the thinking or opinions of the OP.
Here is an exhibit: Is it right to use the words Deep/Shallow copy of a pointer
It's voted as a duplicate by voters that probably haven't really bothered to understand the problem of the OP. The referenced answer is about the general concept of deep/shallow, the question is very specifically about the use of the terms in a language where pointers are objects in their own right, and can be also considered (and copied) as "standalone" objects and not as reference to other objects. I don't know if it's a good question, but you can't rephrase it without stripping it of its substance. The clarification is the answer, in a way.