Why is asking about pros and cons not accepted as focused. Do SO
moderation use the word focused in a more sophisticated meaning than
unusual or do I have a wrong conception about the word focused than
dictionaries.
First and foremost: We only have a limited number of close reasons available, and their wording might not precisely apply for each and every question that will be closed for it.
The term Needs more focus formerly was too broad, and I personally believe it wasn't necessarily the best change to achieve more clarity at the site of the questioners.
Anyways that reason will be used for
- Too broad questions (E.g. some topic covered in whole books)
- Polling questions (as you're referring to) which will lead to endless, undecidable discussions. If there are well known and concise points, these questions could be valid. It depends and needs to be decided for every single case.
- Questions which contain a bunch of questions in the body, each deserving a separate question asked
Do I always have to copy and paste some code and ask about an error
due to a typo -to be counted as using SO properly?
Code examples aren't strictly necessary if the question isn't about code.
If the question is asking about non-working code (be it due to a typo or not) require a minimal example that can be just copied and tried by anyone else to reproduce the error.
If it's really a problem raised due to a typo or some very basic missing in the programming language (e.g. missing indentation in python, wrong use of well-documented functions, etc.) in the code, it isn't considered to be helpful for future research, because it's a problem very specific to the asker.
These questions will be closed, and most probably deleted. Answers about the wrong thing in the code, are often given as comments, to be at least helpful for the asker.