I'm looking at a question: What will be the pattern for UTF-8 in Json Schema?
It seems on-topic for the site, appears similar to other questions I've answered on the subject matter (both in Unicode, and JSON Schema, of which I am an author), and the question does have a few minor problems; however the problem isn't that the question cannot be answered; the problem is the question seems to mis-use some technical terms, and I can answer this question as soon as we can nail down what was actually intended.
For example, I suspect the question author wants to say "BMP (basic multilingual plane)" but said "UTF-8" instead. However, like a lot of issues, it may require some back-and-forth questioning to understand the true nature.
Questions may be closed as unclear very quickly, so once the author has provided a clarification, I cannot post an answer.
So why jump on closing the question? This means that people with an answer cannot add one. This provides a strong disincentive to closing a question if I think the author is going to clarify it in a way I can answer.
I think it's fine to mark this as "needs clarification" but I want to encourage seeking & getting clarifications from the author, and closing the question outright seems exactly the wrong way to handle this.
I've had a recurring problem with perfectly usable questions being closed. For example, multiple cases where someone adds incorrect tags, then people with expertise in those tags don't understand the question & mark it as spam, when in fact it was just triaged poorly; So I typically have to track down a moderator to get it reopened just so I can answer it, which seems like a poor use of our time. I'd like to know if there's a better way to do this.