I don't see the full history of the interaction, and I'm not a Swift programmer, but here is my attempt at an explanation of your key question:
"What is unclear about this question?"
One lead is this comment by one of the close voters (Cristik):
"This looks like an XY problem. Can you give details how would you use this information? Some code snippets to exemplify this would help, even if they don't compile."
I'm not that person and I didn't vote to close but it would be good if you reply to their concrete question - they are trying to help you!
Having looked at the question, I agree that the question is in places unclear. Why is the generic solution not sufficient? What is the generic solution, could you show it? Then we know what you're trying to achieve.
Your code snippet is helpful but a little bit unclear to me as well (as a non-Swift programmer at least):
typealias NamedTuple = (/*someunknowntype*/, /*someotherunknowntype*/)
// Later in the code...
let tupleType = NamedTuple.self // repetitive, I know... but I know how to get its own type
let tupleElement0Type = // <-- How do I get this from the NamedTuple alias?
In particular, it's not clear to me why you include that line let tupleType = NamedTuple.self
. I don't understand it even with the comment, which I don't fully understand either "repetitive, I know... but I know how to get its own type". How is it repetitive? It doesn't repeat anything as far as I can tell? Have you included that line to show that that's not what you're trying to get? Then state that.
It's great that you tried to create a minimal code example, but maybe you went a little too far with the minimal here.
Overall, it happens that people vote to close and don't give detailed reasons. That's frustrating, I agree, and it would be very nice if close voters justified what they found unclear - but unfortunately there are too many new questions and too few reviewers (unpaid volunteers by the way like almost all of us here) - so sometimes this happens.
ArrayType.Element.type
-equivalent for tuple's.