Subjective questions
However, this is not very helpful for a person who wants to choose how to do some task.
This isn't our concern. One of the consequences of Stack Overflow not being a discussion forum, is that the purpose is not specifically to "help" the OP. The purpose is to answer a question that fits into a searchable reference Q&A library which fits within that library's scope. For Stack Overflow, we have chosen to exclude unqualified "best way" queries because they generate more heat than light. We can't weigh subjective factors on others' behalf, and we also don't consider the OP's subjective weighting more important than anyone else's.
The question may still be considered opinion-based, because ultimately your decision depends on your opinion on A, B and C. However, "A, B and C" is a vital piece of information, and attaching it to the question makes the world better.
No; attaching it to a question that directly solicits that kind of information makes the world better.
To make a question like this objectively answerable in the format, it needs to be redesigned. There are three main approaches to this:
Skip the "best way" part entirely, and just open the floor for any reasonable approach (as long as this doesn't make the question too unfocused).
Choose a single objective criterion by which solutions may be judged (for example, runtime or memory usage).
Limit the solutions ahead of time to a specific closed set, and ask to know what criteria are relevant for making the decision.
In the latter case, an answer like you describe could be appropriate. Ideally it would give detail along the lines of "solution X tends to require less scratch disk space than solution Y in cases where A and C are within certain parameters", or "solution Y can avoid recalculating the B heuristic, giving better runtime performance when that heuristic is computationally expensive".
Explaining close votes
Use the comments. That's part of what they're for. Absolutely do not ever write an answer because you think there's a problem with how the question is asked. The point of closing questions is explicitly to prevent the answer section from being used. The fact that there is a problem with the question is a reason not to answer it. That is in fact the defining feature of "problem" in this context. When close reasons were chosen, and refined over the years, all of this was explicitly for the purpose of communicating the reasons not to answer questions.
Usually such information can fit in comments (e.g. "needs debugging details"), but sometimes not.
You get 600 characters for a comment - that's quite a lot. It's enough that I can fit copy-paste feedback like:
Welcome to Stack Overflow. Please read [ask]. We do not write answers here
that "find the bug"; we require a **specific** question - which will come
out of your best attempt to [understand](//meta.stackoverflow.com/q/261592/)
and [locate](//ericlippert.com/2014/03/05) a specific problem, and showcase
it in a [mre]. A question that is suitable for Stack Overflow is one where
you have already figured out the **specific part** of the code that does
something different from what you expect (and you should concretely *expect
something*), and don't understand why.
with multiple links and a detailed explanation of what is expected in order for a question to have appropriately narrowed focus and include necessary "debugging" details (I continue to insist that questions like this are no longer actually about debugging once they meet standards).
In some cases I can follow up with a more tailored comment that points out specific things to try isolating or removing, so as to determine where the problem is occurring. Or I might, following the Socratic method, ask pointed questions about exactly what OP expects to observe at certain key points in the code's execution. This is normally quite easy to do within 600 characters.
The same thing applies for every other close reason, and for every other common category of bad question (these categories are themselves subjective, and certainly don't map 1:1 with close reasons, but it's still vanishingly rare that a question should be closed for a custom reason).
You shouldn't need to show multi-line code in order to demonstrate what is wrong with a question. If OP didn't already provide code to point at, writing your own is certainly not going to help at. If there is code to point at, do so: "When you debug the code, is the block starting with if (foo) {
actually entered?" If you can't readily do this, that's the first real problem with the question: it does not have a properly minimal reproducible example.
Some specific examples
I had to search through quite a lot to find ones which were closed, but whose close reason required nontrivial explanation.
None of these are tricky. There may have been a lot of comment discussion, but that's because people are in general bad at avoiding forum-mode discussion when they are given a free-form text input. Let's look at the first three C++ questions for example:
Are unit tests necessary for embedded C/C++ projects?
The title question is subjective because there is no concrete way to define "necessary". The body "asks" (really, doubts) whether certain "complex things" could in principle be unit-tested. There's nothing of substance there; the kind of "thing" in question isn't properly specified, nor is the reason for doubt explained. Trivially, complex systems are composed of smaller parts. The last line asks "what everyone thinks"; i.e. it tries to treat the site as the discussion forum that it isn't.
Absolutely none of that is the slightest bit difficult to explain, and most of it doesn't really need explanation. The reason the comment section is long is because people are treating the comment section as a discussion forum. The only useful comments there are the ones suggesting better places to ask the question. Most of them seem to be trying to answer "why are unit tests in general necessary?", which is far too broad of a question, and still somewhat subjective. There might be something along the lines of "what is the purpose of unit tests?" already available that could, at a stretch, have been used as a duplicate, or linked as a reference.
What's the difference between threading libraries like pthreads and std::thread?
This clearly needs more focus. In general, "what's the difference between X and Y" questions are rarely suitable, since they can't really be answered other than answering "what's X" and also answering "what's Y", which is two separate questions. The OP is looking for multiple comparisons, and details about how each tool works. It doesn't require seven comments to explain this - so it's not surprising that the comments overlap. They're also all quite a bit shorter than the limit.
Storing a song genres in just one byte
The OP is trying to design a system and doesn't have clear requirements for that system - only a vague idea. The comments offer some critique of that idea - this is derailing, because the comments should criticize the presentation of the question. Even if we take the one design idea for granted, it devolves into three clearly separate questions: one about encoding, one about decoding, and one about searching for matches. None of those is clearly stated, and if they were, they would likely be duplicates.
Even including the meta-commentary about the existing comments, the above paragraph is shorter than 600 characters.
I hope by now that the pattern is obvious. The problem you are imagining, wherein explaining the problem with the question takes too much space for the comments, simply doesn't exist.