That question definitely should be closed for one reason or another.
There is some precedent (although I do not really agree) for the idea that the close reason doesn't really matter. I would rather see a question closed as a duplicate than for some other reason, because that way at least directly gives OP a link to useful information for the task at hand, and not just guidance on asking better questions (which might well be ignored anyway). Also, as long as the title is somewhat representative, duplicates also help search engine users to find the canonical. They also serve as a secondary voting system: the really important questions aren't simply the ones with the highest score, but also the ones that get used the most often to close duplicates.
Debugging questions are rarely any good, anyway
We don't say that we don't accept them, but we might as well not be accepting them per policy. (Of course, tons of them get through anyway). Consider what needs to be done to avoid the "needs debugging details" closure reason:
The question should be updated to include desired behavior, a specific problem or error, and the shortest code necessary to reproduce the problem.
The M in MRE (or MCVE, if you prefer) is really important. When someone has really put in the effort to check what is going on in the code, and understand error messages, only then does it become possible to write a really proper MRE.
When OP does that work and provides the MRE, sometimes the question is very good. However, here is the trick: it is not a question about debugging any more. Instead, it's really a "why" question about the behaviour of a specific step in the code:
Those aren't the actual titles - hence the quotation marks. They're phrased as what remains of the debugging process after actually, you know, debugging. But they're really "why" questions.
Asking for debugging help makes the question ambiguous
A huge fraction of questions ask for help debugging the code to implement some common task. This introduces an ambiguity: is the question about the bug? Or is it about the task? If both, the question needs more focus; if only one, it needs (details or) clarity (which one?). In many cases (thanks to PM 2Ring for pointing this out) OP hasn't actually thought about this yet.
To avoid making the discussion ambiguous as well, I like to reserve the word task for the task (what the code is supposed to do), and problem for the cause of the failure (the bug; i.e., that which is found by debugging, and would also be fixed by debugging in the cases where OP acknowledges that it was a typo).
So, your question here on meta seems to be: should we close as duplicate if we have a canonical for the task, if it seems like OP might be more concerned with the problem? Well... questions that merit closure, should be closed as quickly as possible. The FGITWs are really fast, and this site has way too many open questions. But there's still that annoying issue about the closure reason and trying to be accurate and helpful....
"Okay, but is that really an appropriate duplicate target?"
If the question is a debugging question of the sort I described above, it should normally be deleted, too. The ambiguity means it isn't helpful, and it will usually have a useless or misleading title.
Closing the question as a duplicate doesn't allow for rapid automatic deletion by the Roomba; but it's potentially faster, which is crucial for avoiding FGITW and also allows for getting to the manual deletion process that much faster.
Finally: keep in mind that we do curate canonicals for common simple syntax and logic errors. For example. I've written some myself, too. While it's tempting to treat these as typos, that's a) slower and b) often wrong - since many people who ask will genuinely not understand the problem, even after it is highlighted for them.
After closing a debugging question as a duplicate of a canonical for the task, the duplicates list can be edited to add a canonical for the problem. Or vice-versa. Getting that part wrong initially is not that big of a deal. Better yet, a question that has both kinds of dupe links is a big screaming delete-me red flag, which helps advise later curators. Rather than simply saying "this question needs more focus", it directly shows why the question is lacking in focus.
!= 0
instead of!= "0"
looks typo'ish. Closing as dupe probably helps them more than closing as typo.