What if I want to ask a question for which I haven't got any idea what to try but want simple solution?
What if I want to ask a question for other gender's general problems which I can not try? (She doesn't have internet access)
What if I want to ask a question for which I haven't got any idea what to try but want simple solution?
What if I want to ask a question for other gender's general problems which I can not try? (She doesn't have internet access)
I wasn't gonna answer this, but Sterno's answer is fixated on closing... which I think is sorta like answering a question about dietary health with a reference to the still-not-dead guy who eats nothing but Big Macs. Yeah, ok, leaving out details might not kill your question, but that doesn't make it an awesome idea if you actually care about solving your problem...
...And that's where you need to focus: on solving a real problem. Doesn't necessarily need to be your problem, but it damn well better be a problem you understand as well as if it was your own. Hypothetical problems and problems for which you can't actually test any of the proposed solutions are notoriously problematic, so much so that the help center explicitly states,
You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face.
Since you used the example of asking a question for a member of the opposite sex, let me use this question an example of what not to do:
Note that not mentioning what was tried isn't among the errors there! This is why "what have you tried" makes for a lousy criteria - without knowing why the things you've tried didn't work, there's little value to this information; for all we know, you just did it wrong and we should explain how to do it right.
Asking a good question involves communicating well enough to put potential answerers in a position similar to your own, one in which they can then use their own experience to find an answer. Don't assume that there's a vast library of applicable solutions floating around which you'll be able to cherry-pick for your specific scenario, and by the same token don't assume that you can throw up someone else's problem without knowing anything about it, and be able to accurately identify a workable solution on their behalf.
Simply put, no. The meta consensus has been that closing for that reason is not workable. I say consensus because at this point there have been two "no" answers, one poorly voted "maybe" answer, and no "yes" answers.
It has been discussed at some length here.
Are people still closing for this reason? If so, it would be great if one of them could present a counter-argument so the community could better reflect the decision in meta voting.
That said, asking questions "for someone else" isn't exactly prohibited, but can often lead to poor quality questions (which will be down-voted) or possibly even closed as unclear what you're asking if you don't describe the problem well enough.