even if they don't explicitly ask a question? I was under the impression that if someone wants to share information on Stack Overflow, they should format the problem they have solved as a question, and then post a self-answer to that question.
Your understanding here is correct.
Since it looks well-researched and insightful, I upvoted it
Please don't do this. Other people incorrectly did so, which is why the "question" was inappropriately selected as an audit.
"Question" posts that don't fit the site standards should be closed.
To close something is to prevent it from receiving answers until reopened; this is, in other words, a signal that the question should not be answered.
The purpose of questions on a Q&A site is to be answered. Therefore, closure is a signal that the attempt at a question is not useful, which makes it eligible for downvoting as well. Especially when it appears that the problem could not be solved without fundamentally changing the question: if close votes were consistently accompanied by downvotes, unsalvagable questions would more consistently reach -3 upon closure, and thus be more consistently eligible for immediate deletion.
But this question probably could be salvaged by moving the "has been fixed in DescTools" part to an answer, showing a concrete example in the question, and asking about how to get the correct result - without assuming in the question that it's a bug in wilcox.test
, and without explicitly asking for alternative tools etc.
but I also flagged it as "Needs Improvement → Community-Specific Reason → Not Reproducible"
It appears that "not about programming" was the consensus among those with close-vote privileges. When there is no attempt to ask a question, but the post still seems to be about some programming-related topic, my default is "needs details or clarity": it's unclear why the post is being presented as a Stack Overflow question, when it doesn't appear that there's anything to ask or answer.