Of all the cruft in the JavaScript tag, some meaningful percentage is of the typo variety, at least if you define typos slightly more broadly that given in the close reason, to include simple syntax errors and trivial "mental typos".
A great majority of these could be discovered via a simple lint--for example the famous =
vs. ==
problem. Probably 50% or more of them could be solved by opening the console and looking at the errors. Whatever problems remained of the simple-logical-error-brain-fart variety could be easily resolved by some trivial debugging.
I've added comments to dozens if not hundreds of posts reminding people they could lint, or look at the console, or debug. So have others. No small number respond saying they hadn't heard of those things. It's getting really old.
The bottom line is that the vast majority of low-rep users asking lame questions apparently have never bothered to educate themselves about how to open the console or simple debugging approaches and tools, much less use a linter.
I therefore thought to write a canonical question/answer titled "My JavaScript program doesn't work, and I think it might be a typo; how can I find it?", and collect answers there on a different types of typos and ways to find them.
However, reaction has been mixed. I got three "too broad" close votes. One person immediately edited my question to remove all the important information to guide potential answerers into making their answer as useful as possible (view edit history). Another suggested raising this issue in meta, which is what I am doing now.
Is this a bad idea, or a good idea, or an OK idea that needs tweaking?