I was working through the Close Votes queue today when I encountered this question. Although there was an existing vote to close for "needs more focus," I voted to keep it open because:
- It provides a complete, minimal example showing the code the asker wants debugged
- It has a reasonably clear problem statement focused on a single task: He wants to add a second click event that will remove the "extendInputSearch" class from
#searchElement
when a user clicks outside the input element - It shows the asker's attempt to solve the problem and explains why it didn't work (although this could be better, he just says "it stops my first click event from working" instead of giving more specific error details)
In fact, I can already see the asker's problem and could write an answer that solves it. The problem with his second event listener is that it's being applied to the entire #main
element (via the variable offCanvas
), which includes #searchElement
itself as a child, so when a user clicks on #searchElement
both the "add class" and "remove class" events get fired and it looks like the first event listener "does nothing."
However, after voting to keep this question open, I was informed that I failed an audit, and the correct answer was to vote to close for "needs more focus." Apparently, it should have been obvious that this question was too broad, and could never be answered in its current form. What did I miss in my analysis?