**Closure** indicates that there's a problem with the question that must be fixed before bad answers start rolling in, like asking for a recommendation, or just being incomprehensible. **Downvotes** indicate that there's a problem with the question that doesn't merit immediate closure, like a question that can be answered, but the question itself is poorly researched or poorly phrased. A while ago (and you were probably around for this), we had the ["lacks minimal understanding"](https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/215546/175248) close reason. [Thankfully that was removed](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/252585/1079354), and the reason for that was simple: > ##Unclear what you know == Unclear what you're asking > I was discussing the results here with Anna, noting in the process how this close reason could be described as "unclear if it's too broad", and she made a rather insightful observation: **we're still talking about questions that are *Unclear What You're Asking*** - we just have some fairly unhelpful guidance attached to that close reason. > ***So let's fix that.*** --- > There were a handful of people who interpreted "minimal understanding" as a euphemism for "visible effort" or even "a wall of code". That was never the intent, as it's never been something I've observed as a widespread *implicit* requirement on Stack Overflow: a **clearly-written, reasonably-scoped, answerable programming question** should strive to include as much information as necessary *and no more*; doing otherwise is a much more frequent source of frustration. If someone asks a question that is otherwise on-topic but not an ideal question, then **ideally it should just be downvoted**. Closure sends the wrong signal in that they think that it can be fixed, when in reality it's just going to fade into the background of noise.