6:01 AM
@sideshowbarker Thanks for the reply. I don't use any of the userscripts for automatically generating requests in here (obviously) and never have, so I don't really have an intuitive feel for what specific reasons are auto-generated. If "no code" is really part of the auto-generated reason in that userscript, perhaps the userscript should be revised, because this is a specific issue that does not apply to all questions that need debugging details.
But, yes, somewhat like Stephen said, the close reason "needs/lacks debugging details" does only apply to questions that are seeking debugging help, so it makes little sense to apply it to "how-to" questions, so that was already confusing me.
@sideshowbarker The thing is, an MRE is only required for debugging questions. While many/most questions on SO might (unfortunately) be debugging questions, that is not the only type of question, and definitely not the most useful or interesting question. Such non-debugging questions (including how-to questions) do not require MREs, and thus cannot be closed for lacking them.
They may, of course, lack sufficient information to explain the problem, in which case, the "needs details or clarity" close reason can/should be used, preferably with a comment describing what specific information/details are needed, since, as you mentioned, the close reason description is generic (by necessity) and thus does not include question-specific information.
(If the problem is obvious, like the question is content-free or non-English, then it is reasonable to save effort by not posting a comment that points out the obvious.)
@KarlKnechtel I mean, I don't know, I really and truly don't get it. What do you mean by "information already presented"? You mean that the code sample shown in the question demonstrates that the author already understands looping and printing, so they should be able to apply their understanding of those concepts to solve other problems?
I mean, obviously they cannot, which is why they're asking a question, and having a standard that expects people to solve their own problems is completely counter-productive to a Q&A site. As I already noted, given what I know about programming, I can solve the vast majority of problems completely on my own, which is why I rarely ask any questions (and those that do are mostly just a result of my getting lazy or bored and giving up before I find the answer(s) myself), but that's honestly...
...not all that great for contributing to the knowledge base here. It would be better if I actually did ask the question, presuming that I could not find an existing Q&A here covering it, even if I answered the question myself by applying the concepts I already know. This isn't like going to a professor's office hours and wasting their time by asking questions you already know the answer to. That's not the correct cognitive model for an SE Q&A site.
@KarlKnechtel It really seems like you are criticizing those who ask questions for not already knowing the answer, and that's honestly just ridiculous. If you, given your knowledge and experience, are able to draw out a more fundamental issue from a question than the asker's myopic view allows them to do, then you are welcome and even encouraged to edit the question and do so. But criticizing the asker for asking a question about the specific problem that they're having is...
well, maybe it's coherent, but it certainly explains why you're so frustrated.
@KarlKnechtel No, what you do when the solution to the problem is obvious to you is to answer the question. Talk about not understanding why this is difficult to understand...
If you have a string, and you want to build another string that contains that original string repeated N times, that doesn't have anything at all to do with a list, and yet all of the questions you've closed that as a duplicate of talk about lists.
So if you're frustrated with the inability to find information on Stack Overflow about this, then from where I'm sitting, you have only yourself to blame...
Of course, if you already know Python and everything about how it works, then you can connect these dots, but... that's not going to be the case for anyone asking questions, nor is it the case for most people searching for answers to questions. Yet somehow you got to a point where you think that that's a reasonable expectation.
@tacoshy It is an attempt to answer the question. The fact that it fails to answer the question is not relevant. Wrong answers shouldn't be flagged as NAA.