In its original form, my Meta question has proven to be not very useful, as it was based on the mistaken assumption that the value of the audit question under discussion (which is linked in the comments) was in demonstrating some hidden difficulty relating to the R programming language. This is not the case.
Instead, based on the accepted answer to my question, I realize I may have been habitually misusing the "Needs Debugging Details" flag in the Triage queue.
I had been under the impression that this flag was applicable to all questions which are practical (i.e. asking about specific code, not concepts), which ask how to perform a specific and well-defined task having a straightforward solution, and do not demonstrate any of the following:
a) A non-working code attempt
b) Mention of places the asker has looked for answers (and not found any)
c) Some specific difficulty encountered in accomplishing the task (not necessarily requiring a code example)
This is not actually the case, and as the answer to this question states, a well-asked question about a specific coding task can be valuable (and possibly better off) without including any of the above. Categorically, and not specific to this particular linked question (or the R programming language), this kind of question should be reviewed as "Looks OK" (unless it is a clear duplicate).
Based on this feedback, I will be using "Needs Debugging Details" much less frequently in the future.
Below is the original question, to avoid invalidating the answer and comments:
There was a question asked recently about obtaining pairwise squared differences from numbers in a data set in R. What got my attention about this question was that although the task to be performed and the desired output were clearly stated (with both a written description and properly formatted code), the asker hadn't included any specific attempts at actually solving the problem.
While I know that not every question requires a long list of failed attempts [!], the ones that don't usually tend to be more on the conceptual side, or else asking about a specific API which is lacking in documentation. (Or else, they usually at least explain why the specific task is difficult to accomplish.) But, this question didn't seem to fall into any of those categories.
I instantly (unfairly, as it turns out) dismissed it as a "do my homework" type question, and without further consideration, flagged it as "Needs debugging details."
The question was actually a +9 score known-good question, which has received multiple high quality answers. I'll admit to being surprised, because usually high-quality new questions look more "complex," while highly upvoted "simple" questions tend to be older, from back when the site was still building a base of FAQs.
Since I was obviously mistaken about the question's quality, I've since upvoted it (it's neat to be able to give a new user their first silver badge :)). But now I'm wondering if there's something different about R that makes accomplishing this kind of task more difficult than in the languages I'm familiar with.
So, my actual question (mainly out of curiosity, but maybe it will help future reviewers, too!) is:
What makes this kind of task so difficult to accomplish in R?