While you don't have perhaps the domain knowledge to answer the question, you do have the community knowledge to tell if the question is properly written.
It should be easy to tell questions that have formatting issues, have no code, are spam or blatant off-topic.
The problem goes for those questions that are, theoretically, properly written, but may lack some details that you're not aware of due to your lack of knowledge in the framework. For example, let's assume you have no idea on Docker, a user posted a docker-compose.yml
file but no Dockerfile
. You can't tell that file is required for Docker, because you don't know that fact.
So yes, you should skip those questions if they apparently seem well-written, and let users more knowledgeable tell if the question needs more detail.
Is it bad that SO gives you questions like that in triage? not necessarily. Maybe you cannot complete triage on questions out of your knowledge, but you are still able to quickly turn out the spam and very low quality content. Giving you these questions reduce the time a low quality post needs to be removed (since it reaches a broader audience), perhaps at the expense that some better detailed post missing details take a bit longer to close. That's OK to me, we're tackling down the most problematic questions first.
If a post without key details but well-written survives 30 minutes, maybe some people will already tell the author the missing details and flag the post anyway without it being in the triage. But a spam or malware post surviving 30 minutes is way more critical for the community.