Stack Overflow is a strong community constructing questions that will assist anybody looking for an answer online or on the site. I used the word constructing on purpose, every question is unique in it's way and must be easily readable - and if a question doesn't stand the standards it's down voted, marked accordingly, or even removed. But what if, the question is easily readable, answerable, and doesn't contain a duplicate, but still is of a very low quality. Down-voting will still let it stay on the site and come in the way when someone is looking for an answer.
I'm discussing this because recently I've come across a user who opens a question about anything, and for some reason he's still not blocked from asking questions. An example that anyone programming for a few weeks can relate to, "Why doesn't my Java class work?", and then when you open his snippet you can see that he didn't declare a constructor. Or, if you've programmed in AngularJS I'll give you a much better and actual example. One of his questions was about how to change a $scope variable on click, and another question is how to display a $scope variable from a list. Those two questions are almost the same thing and he just couldn't bother looking for answers or learning the language first.
Those two questions are properly formed, he included code that didn't work - but they are still of a very, very low quality, which could have been solved without filling the questions database with them.
Why isn't there a flag purely for questions of low quality? Yes, there is one, but the description doesn't match what I'm saying.
This question has severe formatting or content problems. This question is unlikely to be salvageable through editing, and might need to be removed.
The questions I'm discussing here have no formatting or content problems. They are about real code, which really doesn't work, but is generally of a low level.
What do you think? Are the questions I'm talking about worth flagging low quality although they don't have a 'formatting or content' problems? What's your position on 'content problems', does this in your opinion fall under the description of the LQ flag?