I find that a lot of questions on Stack Overflow are lacking some motivation and context (and could be XY problems). Very often I am commenting new questions by requesting more context & motivation.
For example, this question about "locate the machine instructions that access memory" could be asked both by a graduate student starting a PhD thesis on compilation or static analysis, or by a software developer struggling with a hard to find bug in a million line code base (and I would have adapted my answer differently for each cases, and probably given some very different answers, or at least focus on different items).
But most questions don't give enough context and motivation, and are generally too short. Another example is this question (or that one). With motivation and context information (even a single sentence!), I would have spent much less time answering it.
I feel that:
The text area (in the web interface) for typing the question is often too small. Perhaps making it larger (by default) could help a bit, and make people ask longer questions.
Beginners on Stack Overflow should be reminded that they should generally give not only some MCVE, but also explain their work context in a few sentences. Maybe newbies could be presented a TODO list like:
Have you provided an MCVE?
Have you read documentation? Tell which one in your question! Have you enabled warnings from your compiler and used the debugger?
Have you explained -in one or a few sentences- your general context and work and overall goal (e.g. what kind of application are you coding, with what language, tools, systems)?
Perhaps also the web system could detect those questions which are shorter than e.g. the average of well graded questions (e.g. compare against the average size of questions having a score above 5) and notify the user?
Of course, question motivation should be given after the question itself. All the questions I have asked and which have been well scored have motivation (which I sometimes added after asking the question, but before it was upvoted).
Perhaps even the web interface for questions might have two text areas: one for the question itself, another for the motivation and context (and present the later in a slightly smaller font).