TL:DR: Is lack of effort a reason to close a question?

Over the past few weeks, I've seen conflicting information about whether a lack of effort should contribute to the closing of a question. I've been under the impression since I first became a member that *yes, a lack of effort should be a reason to close a question*. My impression was formed by:

[This Question and its Top Answer](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/261592/how-much-research-effort-is-expected-of-stack-overflow-users)

> You won't have to contend with a poorly-written duplicate of a better
> answer that already exists somewhere else on the site. And you won't
> get frustrated by having your question closed, and the folks reading
> it won't get frustrated by having to close it.

[The Official 'How to ask a good question' page](https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask)

> Search, and research ...and keep track of what you find. Even if you
> don't find a useful answer elsewhere on the site, including links to
> related questions that haven't helped can help others in understanding
> how your question is different from the rest.


However, it was recently pointed out to me, by _very_ high reputation users that a lack of effort *"Has NEVER been a reason to close a question"*. Is this strictly true? Is this a unanimous view?

Most recently, I have seen [this as an answer](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/388573/the-question-was-closed-as-unclear-what-you-are-asking-why) to a question about why a question was closed;

> Lack of Effort has never been a reason to close, but several of the
> commenters alluded to that and one said: "Show us the code".


The other examples were in now deleted comments, or revised answers. I guess what I want to know is - **where do we really draw the line in terms of the effort expected from an OP?** If there is no visible evidence of some kind of effort put forward in a question, _should_ we vote to close it?