I read this question and flagged it as too broad along with some constructive comments.
The question was how to make an user draw shapes in a window and then calculate how many circles were enclosed, with some restrictions. I commented what was wrong with the question and gave some guidelines on how the questioner could solve the problem. He/she commented back and said that the guidelines I provided was the answer he/she was looking for.
Is it on topic to ask for guidelines to solve a bigger problem?
Some acceptable answers contains no actual code but instead general guidelines or pseudo-code, so it seems to be acceptable in certain cases. But in many cases I would believe that these questions are too broad since there are many possible ways to answer them, but I cannot find anything in what can I ask? and what should I avoid? about these types of questions.
And still, too broad is defined as "There are either too many possible answers, or good answers would be too long for this format". An answer with a couple of bullet points don't need to be too long and thus not too broad. Could it be that these questions aren't specific enough?
I understand that asking about specific algorithms is on-topic but is asking "What are the procedures to implement a help pop-up window?" a valid question? In other words; questions that are about bigger concepts than just one algorithm.