When reviewing the close queue, I'm frequently seeing people claiming "this is not an answer" on potential solutions phrased as a question. Sample:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/52975639/119549
Like if someone says:
Does it work if you add this line of code?
...it really means the same thing as:
You should add this line of code.
...only phrased in a way that some people hold conversations when trying to help them solve a problem. Should we really close things of the former pattern as "not an answer" and ask them to post as a new question when it's obviously not them actually asking a question?
Update:
I think the "duplicate" question does cover the same topic, but it doesn't have sufficient clarification for my specific case. I think people are being literal and say "a question is not an answer, therefore this is not an answer." Given how frequently this happens, I think it'd be good to communicate this specific case.
Update 2:
OK, the close reason I think is wrong, but Should we avoid rhetorical questions in answers? is definitely a real dupe.