I don't want to spam people with similar questions. My original question was not quite what I should have been asking. After having two responses and doing more research I realized I should have asked something slightly different. Is there a way to re-phrase my question without having to make a new question while showing it as new so people will see that it needs to be answered?

I tried adding a comment to my question but that is not very noticeable. I also don't want people who answered the original question to get down voted because their answers wouldn't match what I may edit the question into.

Is the best thing for me to do is post a new question?

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Please ask questions about SO on meta.stackoverflow.com. – gnostradamus Aug 24 '09 at 20:43
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Aug 24 '09 at 20:44

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3 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

I think that referencing the old question and saying what is the difference and why that difference is relevant to the question is perfectly valid and will not be considered spam. After all, there are tons of slightly different questions asked by different people.

http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/8910/asking-a-similar-but-not-the-same-question

http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/10243/asking-a-follow-up-question

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I would make your original question to better match the answers it has received first.

After doing that, go ahead and ask another question.

You may want to add in your question, that it was in response to the answers you received on your previous question, and provide a link.

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Rephrase the question so that's it's slightly different in the details, and ask again.

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