There's two contexts available to a reviewer when performing a review.
- Generic; does the question look like it could be a question here with all of the correct parts in it?
- Specific; does the question in context to the problem domain make coherent sense?
Sometimes when reviewing, you require both contexts. If the question satisfies the generic context but you're not quite certain on the specific front, it may be safest to simply skip the question and leave it for someone else who is more experienced.
To your points:
The question explicitly shows REPL output alongside an error message. This more than satisfies MCVE.
- there is writing mistakes to fix
Fix them. This isn't a reason to close a question; it's an opportunity for you to make an improvement to the question.
- the source code formatting is unclear
This goes back to the "Specific" context; given that you probably wouldn't recognize this as REPL output, it is easy to see how one could fall into this trap.
- (less important, but still interesting to improve the question quality) some parts should be put in bold
You originally had <strong>
tags, which in HTML parlance would translate to bold text. I disagree. Nothing in that question needs to be emboldened.