When you say "over-moderation", what I think you mean is that Stack Overflow's standards are too high, it is too hard to write a question that is well-received. And yes, Stack Overflow expects a relatively high standard for questions, much higher than a typical forum, chat room, Facebook group or so on, and that makes it difficult to write a question that will be well-received.
But are the standards too high? Well, too high for who? Broadly, I would say there are three sorts of people who use Stack Overflow:
- People who mostly write answers,
- People who mostly ask questions about problems they are facing,
- People who mostly don't even have user accounts, and post neither questions nor answers, instead they find answers by searching for existing Q&As, typically on Google or other search engines.
Group 1 would think the standards are too high if a question they want to answer gets closed. Group 2 thinks the standards are too high when they have a problem but they can't ask a question about it that meets the standards. But group 3 would only think the standards are too high if the Q&A they're looking for doesn't exist because nobody was able to ask the question they care about.
The thing is, group 3 is by far the largest. And group 3 is the biggest beneficiary of high standards: when they search, they want to find one Q&A that is clearly about the problem they have, not a hundred links to questions that might be related but it takes effort to tell.
So a good question on Stack Overflow is one about a problem that other people might have, that there isn't already an existing Q&A about, and one that is clear and specific enough that someone with a similar problem can tell whether or not theirs is the same problem. And that's not easy to write, particularly for members of group 2 who are often relatively less knowledgeable programmers and don't necessarily know what problems other programmers might face. Unfortunately, it often takes similar skills to judge whether a question would be useful or interesting to a wider audience and what details about the problem need to be specified, as the skills that would be required to solve the problem for yourself anyway.
My best advice to members of group 2 is to learn by observation - Stack Overflow is a community, and if you watch how the community operates you can learn its standards and norms. Watch a tag you're interested, see what questions are asked, what clarifications are asked for in comments, what posts get upvoted or downvoted or closed. If you learn to tell whether someone else's question is high or low quality, you can apply that knowledge when you write your own questions. More generally, I'd say that any time you join a community, it takes some time and observation to learn how to participate in it.
Yes, there is a way
" comment (now deleted) that you received was unhelpful and unfriendly, and shouldn't have been posted (you can flag such comments as "unfriendly or unkind" or "no longer needed"). Someone else posted a more helpful comment, and you followed that advice (I've removed that comment too, as it's no longer needed). I'm not sure why people felt it necessary to respond to that by deleting the question. I've undeleted it, both to facilitate discussion here and because I don't think it merited deletion.