"Too localized" is an old close reason that is no longer used. A lot of old site regulars have a reasonably good intuition for what questions do or don't belong on Stack Overflow, but don't have an up-to-date understanding of how to map problems to closure reasons. (This is an understatement; the "too localized" close reason was removed many years ago.)
The point of Stack Overflow, as described in the tour, is to get away from the traditional model of a discussion forum where you can submit a personalized request for help with a code project. It's intended to be somewhere that a given question only needs to be answered once, and then other people with the same question can be referred there.
For this to work, people who have the question need to do the work first to understand what the question actually is. In other words: if you are trying to figure out a problem in your existing code, it's your responsibility before posting to:
Understand, step by step, what you intend for the existing code to do and how you intend for it to work;
Carefully check, step by step, what is actually happening as the code runs, and see where it does something different from your expectation;
Isolate one such instance of the code doing something wrong, and set up minimal framing for that part of the code, so that you can demonstrate the problem directly and so that others can reproduce it directly;
Ask a question about that example - for example, "why doesn't foo
become 1
?" (you should be able to explain clearly why you think foo
should become 1
after the code has run), or "why does this error occur?", or "where does the file need to be in order for it to be found by this code?". (Alternately, at this point you might decide that you want to ask a "how do I do this?" question instead. In this case, we need a clear specification for "this"; your expected input and output from the previous steps will get you a large part of the way there.)
In other words: we don't provide a debugging service; we don't want to look at hundreds of lines of code and find the problem for you. We also don't solve problems - we cannot "help" you - we answer questions.
If, after finding the problem, you decide that you don't have a question to ask about it, great! In many of these cases, Stack Overflow has already helped you:
By following this process to form a proper question, you end up with the ability to search existing questions on Stack Overflow. Because the previous person with the same problem followed these steps, the Q&A you find will be useful to you as well, and not just that person - because the problem has been extracted, and matches what you're looking for.
By following this process to form a proper question, maybe you realize you can already answer it. If it turns out that you just mis-typed something, or misunderstood something about the problem specification, etc., then there's nothing more to do. But if you discovered some interesting concept underlying the problem, and you don't already see a Q&A about it, you can ask and answer the question yourself, and help many other people later who didn't have your special insight.
By following this process to form a proper question, maybe you're still completely stuck. Every step you can think of breaking the code down into does exactly what you expect, it all connects together properly, but somehow you still get a wrong result. In this case, you don't have a question about programming; you have a question about logic - and the answer can probably only be found within yourself. There's no way that anyone else can properly explain to you why following your steps doesn't get to the right result, because there's no way that anyone else can understand why you think those steps should get to the right result.
Does that mean that if a question is too specific on one code, in a way that it is hard to apply the same logic to other code, it isn't allowed?
This is the wrong mindset. The question is basically never actually "specific to" the code - unless you made a typo or your logic doesn't make sense. But your question can either "need debugging details" or "need more focus" - because you either aren't showing the right part of the code, or haven't provided the necessary context for that code, or both. When you have a proper example that avoids those problems, trivial details like what variable names you used simply won't matter any more. By extracting the part of the code structure that actually causes the problem, you're left with something that necessarily applies to other code.
...go ask chatGPT?
You are more than welcome to ask ChatGPT - off-site - for help with anything. We assume no responsibility for what happens. It very often "hallucinates" and does not have anything like a proper understanding of its own output, or logic or reasoning skills. Sometimes ChatGPT offers suggestions that are not only wrong, but potentially dangerous (i.e., by introducing a security flaw into your code). But it does, in a large fraction of cases, do a very good job as a search engine that can also synthesize and reformat the results. Because of its pattern-matching, it might be able to "find the bug" for you. At the very least, if ChatGPT's answer focuses on a specific part of your code, you might start by trying to test that part in isolation.
If you find that ChatGPT's answer directly solves your problem, that's also just fine. There's a good chance in this case, as well, that Stack Overflow has already helped you - because a lot of Stack Overflow content can be found in the training data.