Most of the cited instructions are indeed pretty obnoxious, but I want to say a few more words about "Don't suggest this kind of solution. I don't want this." If you believe that a poster is wrong to say this, you are being very, very bold. You are declaring that you know more about the poster's circumstances and needs than the poster does. You are presuming that the poster doesn't just need help with his question, but that he needs help -- your help -- even figuring out which question to ask.
Now, some of the time, it's true, posters are really uninformed and really confused, and they really shouldn't be ruling that particular solution out.
But other times, the poster knows perfectly well about that solution, knows that it will not work for them, and knows that you are about to suggest it -- which is why, to save time, they explained up-front that they couldn't use it. By ignoring them, by suggesting that they have to use that solution whether they want to or not, you're helping no one, all you're doing is showing off your preconceived notions about what's acceptable or possible.
There's a related situation where a poster says "I want to do X" and a bunch of alleged experts pile on to declare that "X is impossible" or "X is a bad idea; you shouldn't even want to do X". This, too, can be intensely annoying and insulting to the original poster. If he didn't need to do X, he wouldn't be here asking about it.
In many cases, I believe, when a poster says something like "I know the conventional wisdom here is to use solution S, but I have a specific constraint and can't use S", or, "I know X is generally considered impossible, but I want to take a stab at it, can anyone help?", and if you believe that S is truly the only way to go or that X is truly impossible, the right thing to do is just move on. Don't downvote the question, don't move to close it as off-topic, don't post comments or answers declaring how wrong the poster is for asking that way. Maybe they're not wrong. (Maybe you don't know everything.)