I would "follow up" on BoltClock's answer with a slightly different differentiation between two types of "typo" (or, at least, two different types of close-voting as typos).
Sticking to my 'native' C++ language, an example of the first would be something like a question that asks, "Why does my for
loop never end?" with code shown that includes the following line:
for (int i = 0; i < 42; j++) {
Here, it is almost certain that the j++
is a typographical error, where i++
was intended. So, in this case, closing as a typo (and leaving a comment with the correction) is entirely appropriate – and, IMHO, posting an answer is decidedly inappropriate (although there are some rep-hungry folks that will, nonetheless, post an answer and get their +15/+25 for it).
The second type is slightly more 'controversial'. An example would be the use of the =
(assignment) operator instead of the ==
(comparison) operator. Now, although such usage – in a line of code like if (a = 42) {
– may be due to a typographical error, it is equally (if not more) likely that it is a misunderstanding of the language by a beginner.
In my experience, questions like this are frequently closed as typos (presumably, because they can be answered in comments and, thus, "resolved in a way unlikely to be helpful to future readers"). However, in such cases, there will almost certainly be a duplicate question addressing the issue. Now, although looking for (and finding) such a duplicate may involve more work from the curator, closing as a duplicate is far more appropriate and far more helpful. If a good, duplicate target (suitable for use as the "canonical") cannot be found, and the question is otherwise well-presented, then consider posting a good answer (including a thorough explanation and links to relevant language Standards and/or references), so that it can be used as that canonical in future. (For the =
versus ==
issue, I did manage to find this canonical Q/A – but it took a bit of searching!)
'Basic level' questions that fall into the second category are not unwelcome on Stack Overflow; indeed, many of the canonicals for these have become extremely popular Q/As, with huge view counts and upvotes. Furthermore, for those curators with the gold tag-badge hammer, it is (much) quicker to close vote as a duplicate than it is to cast 1 of the 3 required CVs to close as a "typo".