While I sympathize with the problem of not knowing where to start, asking off-topic questions on Stack Overflow is not the way to go. Stack Overflow is simply not a "do my research for me" tool. If you don't know what you don't you know, it will be difficult to get help here.
In this case, since the tool I knew needed to be used was PHP (which I figured out by doing research and reading the PHP intro tutorial), I came to a place where there are PHP experts.
Okay, so you started some research but still didn't narrow your problem down much. You decided to come to come to Stack Overflow to find people to help you narrow your problem down. The problem is, you asked a question that is out of scope for Stack Overflow. Stack Overflow is designed to be a Q&A: a site to help solve specific programming problems. The reason your question got closed is that it is not specific.
From your SO post in question:
So my question as a complete newcomer to PHP is this: what features/functions/elements of PHP should I be reading up on to gain the knowledge I need to build this?
There are really no bounds to your question. You are effectively asking "I have no clue what to do, can you tell me how to accomplish my goal or recommend a tool/library/function to do this". Long ago, after a lot of experience with such questions, the community decided these types of recommendation questions are off topic due to the spam and other low quality answers that these types of questions attract. You need to narrow the problem down significantly.
In this case, two people provided suggestions, and I looked into them, did additional research, came up with a solution, and marked one of the answers as accepted. Doesn't this accomplish the purpose of Stack Overflow? Or is the purpose to fend off people who don't yet have enough knowledge about things to ask pointed questions?
We can't control what answers people provide. Some people answer completely off-topic questions that aren't even remotely about programming, simply because they know the answer (or at least think they know the answer). The mere presence of an answer doesn't automatically make the question on-topic. It just means you got an answer to your question.
While all of this may seem overly pedantic and even harsh, the simple fact is that Stack Overflow is the resource that it is today is because the community is very aggressive in moderation. Question (and answer) quality is strictly enforced in order to ensure the quality and reputation of the site is maintained. If the rules were relaxed and all programming questions were welcomed, you would see the quality of the answers quickly fall as the experts on the site today would leave, and the site would no longer be the resource that it is.