@JL2210 They're not broken. They're not meant to catch every post that fails to capitalize the letter "i". There are hundreds of questions getting rejected on SO every day because of these quality filters. You're just not seeing those. So the filter is working; it's keeping the worst of the worst out. You could argue that it should be dialed up. I certainly have. Don't expect that to happen now without Shog.
Don't expect to get stats on how well the existing filters are working, either, without Shog. He's the one who gave us all those juicy numbers, both on Meta and in private channels. That's the advantage of having a CM who is a programmer and has database access. There are very few, if any, of those left, and none of them as accessible to us as Shog was.
In lieu of, no (it already has "but needs more information"), but just drop it, I would say so, but that encourages using it to close even good "How to..." questions, which are fine. The seeking debugging help bit is there to protect against closing questions without code as off-topic, even when no code isn't a problem AFAICT
^^I made a post on meta for it (removing seeking debugging help) - but not sure about wording - I'm no wordsmith! Now we wait for meta to rip me apart :p
@treyBake Oh after reading your meta post I totally misunderstood what you were asking, ignore the whole first part, the only relevant part is "The seeking debugging help bit is there to protect against closing questions without code as off-topic, even when no code isn't a problem AFAICT"
In fact, just ignore what I said ^^ but remember that needs details and seeking debugging help are different
@treyBake The idea behind this close reason is that OP needs to do some debugging themselves too. They can't just say "Stuff's not working!" and get a magic wand from us. They need to check error logs and they need to create a reproducible example. Quite often when making MCVE you are able to spot the mistake yourself.
Needs clarity is when the question asks something, but needs more details to provide an adequate response. e.g. "How can I output a string?" Answer: "Needs more details or clarity!"
@treyBake No, you need to read the extended description: "add additional details to highlight exactly what you need" - not just arbitrary details, specific details to describe the problem
that's what I mean though, to me, that is a specific detail to the problem - but, I guess is just my interpretation, which, is a minority perspective I guess :)
It probably wouldn't matter much if you used either or when closing the question, but there is a significant difference between "debug this code for me" and "How can I perform this vague task"
@Machavity Hail Shog, full of stats. The Skeet is with thee. Blessed art thou amongst CMs, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, StackExchange. Holy Shog, Mother of SE, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of the site's death, Amen.
@Georgy [This chat message] (and the following one)(chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/41570?m=47868132) has a brief summary of when it's possible for people to vote to delete, and when a del-pls is permitted.
Again, discussion about the unfeaturing can be found in the Tavern, because that's arbitrarily where I saw the question asked first. Let's keep it in there, please, if not to keep this room clean, just to keep me from having to repeat myself (cc @NathanOliver)
@Dharman A Google translate of that, "No, you can't", indicates that it's probably just NAA/VLQ, rather than offensive. Is there something about it that Google translate misses?