Closing Questions when the question only exists due to the OP not reading the manual
Example: PHP strcmp not working
Someone has posted a question on Stack Overflow stating that "strcmp is not working". The issue outlined is exactly as it should be and the manual clearly states this.
However I can't find a suitable closure option for questions that arise due to the Asker simply not reading the manual of the language in question.
Just a crap question?
The question is not poorly written, per se, and shows code samples, formatting and enough details for members to gather an exact understanding of the issue, but the issue comes about due entirely to the Asker not having read the Official documentation for the language and instead made assumptions about expected behaviour.
The question quoted above is entirely down to the OP expecting a boolean
value and instead being given an int
eger return value they are then trying to compare.
I see this fairly often and feel the question referenced above is symptomatic of the issue. I feel that RTFM should be a closure option.
Duplication?
No -- I did in the past reference the Stack Overflow Documentation for these questions but even then this was not a closure option. There are numerous reasons as to why these questions are not duplicates; because any programmer worth their salt will not ask the question and will simply realise the issue (and solution) by reading the manual.
Nearest Closure choice
Current (in my view) nearest equivalent:
This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error. While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a manner unlikely to help future readers. This can often be avoided by identifying and closely inspecting the shortest program necessary to reproduce the problem before posting.
A (rough) suggestion for a new additional off-topic closure notice:
Off-topic because...
This question can be easily resolved by reading the manual for this programming language.
This question appears to be a simple misunderstanding of the way this language operates. If the language manual and educational tools do not help to resolve this question please re-write the question to reflect this.