It is quite often that one encounters a question, that may not be exactly bad, it may even be an interesting well-asked one, but that consists of 2, 3, 4 or even more separate (sub)questions.
While very very rarely those (sub)questions have high cohesion between themselves and separating them will do more harm than good, more often than not they are mostly separate questions, related only because the OP is interested in all of them at the same time.
In the latter case, AFAIU the appropriate action is to mark/close the question as Too Broad, because the answer will usually be too big, and the post itself won't probably be helpful to/discoverable by future visitors. And even in the former case it is usually better to try to ask (sub)questions one by one.
All right, so far, so good, but our main asking guideline - https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask doesn't mention that asking such questions is not always a best course of action. And the same with https://stackoverflow.com/help/closed-questions if that gets closed as Too Broad.
So, the proposal: Add "do not ask multiple weakly related questions as a single question" clause to the how-to-ask page.
You will probably ask why we need it if no one reads the how-to and why isn't it a duplicate of What could be done to discourage combining of multiple questions into a single post?.
Because we will be able to at least send OPs to read it, unlike now, when Do not ask multiple questions, read how-to-ask
comment only deserves the response of Ehhm, there is nothing about one post - one question rule/guideline that I can see.
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It is not some heuristic script with popup to discourage asking such questions. It is just a proper specification of what may work and what may not work in the QA format.
EDIT:
It seems that weakly related
part is getting a bit of traction. Well, I agree that ideally there should not be any multi-questions at all, and cases where a question cannot be properly split are hardly probable.
In such a case there is a stronger version: Add "do not ask multiple questions as a single question" clause to the how-to-ask page.
It may be a bit too rigid for some rare edge cases, but it is probably better to handle them as exceptional cases, than to discuss on a meaning of weakly related
and whether it applies for each particular question or not.
read the how-to-ask
when there is nothing on multi-questions in it, seems somehow inappropriate.