I just spent significant time writing a detailed response to a perfectly valid newbie question. The question wasn't asked perfectly, but it was absolutely clear what the newbie was asking and what is problem was.
In the time I spent preparing an answer, which involved writing code to test everything I was doing, someone decided that because the question wasn't asked well enough, he was just going to close it.
To what end? Who is served? I get it. We punish the people who don't ask their questions to standards. That's really friendly to newbies and teaches them what a warm, friendly place StackOverflow is.
It also punishes people who spend time preparing answers. It tells us that, at the whim of who knows whom, our time writing careful answers can be made worthless. We can't post the reply.
Why in the world would we continue to spend more than a few seconds writing lengthy responses to reasonable questions if someone else is going to close them out. I now have a horrible taste in my mouth. (In other words: I'm angry at having my time wasted when I was trying to be helpful.) I'll be taking a break from answering questions. And maybe I'm far from a top performer here, but should that matter?
What is served by closing out answers if they aren't asked perfectly? What is served by removing my ability to answer it anyway?
In this case, it was a perfectly valid question. The guy wanted to know why he couldn't create a in C++ a std::vector. He didn't provide code, but he provided enough info it was clear what was wrong.
I didn't need code to know what he was doing. But someone decided "tough".
Done for a while.
What is served?