> **How should we be advising users asking too broad or unclear how-to
> questions while not implying that such questions require code?**

The current `Unclear` guidance does not insinuate that code is required.

> Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to
> highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard
> to tell exactly what you're asking. See the [How to Ask][1] page for help
> clarifying this question.

Anything more verbose but still generic enough to apply to all questions will still be just that *generic* but now it will be more verbose and more likely ignored or mis-interpreted.

[How to Ask][1] already states *Not all questions benefit from including code. But if your problem is with code you've written, you should include some.*. 

It could be more prominent but that is already in there. Probably ignored because of the wall of text lack of whitespace that that page has become. As someone with a professional education and background in typography and graphic design, it is understandable why it might get ignored/lost in today's 3 sec attention span instant gratification age. That is if people even click on the link.

There is a balance between terse/verbose and generic/specific that is very hard to keep.

> I would argue that anything more verbose that would move the dial in
> helping any given question would have to be so specific to the
> question that it would be useless for any other question ( ignoring
> duplicates ) and be so *expensive* to write up that most people would
> not have any incentive to do anything than what they do now.

  [1]: https://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-ask