My gut instinct is to say that any question containing non-English content that is pertinent to the problem at hand should be closed as "lacks detail", because there really isn't any good way to deal with this:
- Requiring askers to provide translations is just going to result in them posting Google Translated mumbo-jumbo, which helps nobody.
- Requiring askers to use an English OS, IDE, etc. is impractical.
- Allowing any sort of non-English content risks a slippery slope whereby such content becomes accepted, with the result that curation becomes more difficult.
For better or worse, English is the lingua franca of software development, and hence of any website that deals with software development. Being unable or unwilling to provide pertinent details in English is unfortunate, but ultimately not Stack Overflow's problem.
The other answers suggesting to use machine translations are both liable to change the question's meaning, and also place a burden on curators. If you ask a question here, it is your responsibility to ensure it conforms with Stack Overflow's rules, and one of those rules is that every question must be detailed and specific. The reason for this rule is that it makes your question accessible to more people, which both increases its chance of being answered and increases the chance that the question will be helpful to others. Non-English details make a question less accessible - hence they should be disallowed.
Update, prompted by comments from @Braiam and @user253751:
Questions lacking pertinent details in English detract from Stack Overflow's intent to be a high-quality knowledge base for as many people as possible. Consider:
- A question is asked for a specific problem.
- The question has pertinent details in a non-English language.
- The question is unique, i.e. has never been asked before.
Anyone with the same problem will almost certainly not be able to find that question because their pertinent details will almost certainly not be in the same non-English language. The likely result is thus that a duplicate question, completely in English, is asked for this same problem. Due to simple demographics and the aforementioned lingua franca, the English duplicate is far more likely to be answered.
The end result is that we now have two questions, and we don't know that one of them is a duplicate. Further, the non-English question is almost certain to never be answered, again due to demographics/lingua franca.
In essence, then, the original non-English question is dead weight. It is only discoverable by someone using that language, and even if it is found it has no answers. So it's not even neutral - it is patently unhelpful because it's a dead end. It would actually be far better if that question had never existed.