There is no need to treat "how to circumvent" questions specially.
The problem you see is that a particular question is often asked. But if the same question is often asked, there are already tools for dealing with that: you can close the questions as duplicates.
An even nicer option, that does entail more work on your part, but is also not specific to "how to circumvent" questions, is finding or creating a canonical question & answer for this. It seems like it would be beneficial to have an answer explaining that it's impossible, why it's impossible, and what the closest alternatives are that developers can consider using instead.
The above applies when you have one specific question that gets asked over and over, which is the impression I got from your question here. You clarified that the questions are subtly different in two ways:
Firstly, the "How do I do X in Android?" questions don't actually all have the same request as X. In that case, find a duplicate or find or create a canonical question & answer per feature.
Secondly, "How do I do X in Android 5.0?" isn't helped by closing it as a duplicate of "How do I do X in Android 4.0?". This is a bit trickier. If you have a good question & answer you would otherwise have closed it as a duplicate of, and if you know or can verify that the answer is still applicable, then it makes sense to make that question & answer less version-specific. Instead of asking "How do I do X in Android 4.0?", change it to "How do I do X in Android?", and include a mention in the answer that it is correct up to (insert date here), which corresponds to Android 4.0. When the question then gets asked for 5.0, you can update the answer if it doesn't yet cover the current version, and then close the new question as a duplicate. With a polite comment, this shouldn't cause any issues. For example, "I know this wasn't a duplicate when you posted your question, but I updated the other question instead of posting an answer to yours."