StackOverflow has decided, long ago, to simplify the presentation of answer closure into one message; but, to honor multiple votes in deciding to present that message.
This mans that while five people may have mostly closed an answer for "Exact duplicate" but a minority within that five closed it for "needs improvement" the message will be closed for "Exact duplicate"
Little review of the closing process is done, the preferred means of reopening a question basically break down to:
- Attempting to gather enough votes to reopen.
- Appealing on Meta that a question was closed unjustly.
- Direct appeal to a moderator
All of these repair processes do nothing to train the people who close posts, so odds that they eventually form a consistent set of values to close a post is small.
This means that posts that seem close-able, but are bad in a variety of ways will get a variety of closure reasons, or people who read less (or more) carefully will close the post in a divergent-from-the-group manner.
So we could appeal to the developers to fix the message, but in asking for a fix, it is unclear how we would fix the message without:
- Listing the close reason for each voter
- Assuring that sufficient close reasons are present that each voter can pick a high-fidelity closing reason.
- Putting in a text box asking the closer for a high-fidelity reason.
The first puts a lot of negative feedback to a person. Negative feedback tends to drive people away from the site, or at least makes them less likely to contribute.
The second actually makes the problem of unifying closure more difficult.
The third can capture the intent perfectly, but imposes no strict closure policy, requiring even more policing. For example, I could close a post with "You're a cakesniffer!" Which would certainly be personal attack instead of constructive feedback.