I'm talking specifically about this one where I intended to remain ironic but have verged on the sarcastic. But this is really a follow-up to Should we add a "Do my work for me" close reason?.
The OP was essentially asking how to open a file in Perl. We still have no close reason for such questions, and in theory we should be politely explaining all of the alternatives and linking to official documentation, or perhaps doing all of that once and picking out all subsequent culprits as being already asked. That way Stack Overflow becomes a secondary repository for an (out of date and reinterpreted) language definition for all programming and data languages.
I don't think this helps the questioners or answerers, Stack Overflow itself, or the world as a whole, to nursemaid people through the individual operators of every language. As I pointed out to the OP in my comment, he took all of five minutes to discover for himself how to open a file. Sadly, he then came back to say "Yay! Done that! What now?"
All of this will teach people nothing about programming, if only because a programming language is as vital and intuitive as any natural spoken language.
I have written here before that I understand that writing a rule may be semantically awkward, or it may be in conflict with the financial goals of Stack Exchange. But it is hard to believe that Bohemian's post with 409 votes cannot be answered better than with a firm jaw.
I am asking that a proper way to discourage trivial and lazy questions be designed and implemented promptly. I believe it is hugely overdue, and I cannot imagine anyone being disadvantaged by something done properly along these lines.