More and more I'm seeing vague "something is broken but I don't know what please help" questions that should be closed, but instead other users post in the comments "upload your code to GitHub and post a link here and I'll have a look at it". This is obviously against the site's rules that questions must be self-contained, and is yet another example of how some users are apparently hell-bent on turning SO into a discussion forum.
Example one (now deleted by asker after they had a hissy fit when we asked them to follow the rules - image below), two (with an answer to boot) - both on the front page at the time of writing.
I want to make said rule and its implications absolutely clear. The rule is that questions posted to Stack Overflow are required to be entirely self-contained. This implies that any link in a question to an external resource, that is required to understand and answer that question, is not allowed. The reason being that this being the Internet, links are liable to go dead... and if this should happen, that question would no longer be self-contained.
Therefore, the possibility that a link could go dead precludes context-critical links from being present in questions. Ever. Full stop. That is the rule, it is unambiguous, there is no negotiation or interpretation possible.
A link to a GitHub code repository is context-critical to a question, therefore its presence in a question invalidates that question. A comment asking for such a link is worse, because not only is it an implicit acknowledgement that the question is invalid, it is encouraging the asker to make their question worse!
But over and above that, such comments in my experience end up causing comment chains. They start with one along the lines of "have you tried X", with the asker responding "no but i will try it" then "no it didn't work", which repeats ad infinitum until you have a chain longer than my arm. That is a discussion, and Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum.
Since none of the canned flag reasons cover this case, what would be the best custom text to use to assist mods in removing these expeditiously? Or would a new canned flag reason be appropriate for this new epidemic?