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See this question on Stack Overflow:

What is the difference between != and =! in Java?

It is a duplicate of:

What's this =! operator?

which is a duplicate of:

What does the "=!" operator do?

  1. Why such duplicate-chains? Shouldn't it be impossible that a duplicate question can be marked as duplicate of another question that is already a duplicate?

  2. What is the currently longest duplicates chain on Stack Overflow?

  3. Is it actually possible to create a duplicate-loop?

==> Now you can mark this question as a duplicate of another duplicated question.

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  • 7
    1. Unicoins 2. Unicoins 3. Pretty sure it's... Unicoins. Mar 31, 2014 at 21:45
  • 1
    i heard that if you say it three times then a unicoin will appear!!!
    – swasheck
    Mar 31, 2014 at 21:46
  • 2
    It's duplicates all the way down!
    – Oded
    Mar 31, 2014 at 21:46
  • 2
    It's a pyramid scheme of duplicates.
    – Taryn
    Mar 31, 2014 at 21:47
  • 18
    When you see this, you should mark the last one as a duplicate of the first one in the chain. By closing the loop we form a question sink that can accept all duplicates everywhere. These are referred to as möbius dupes, and are the preferred duplicate tail format.
    – Adam Davis
    Mar 31, 2014 at 21:56
  • So you are saying sometimes a duplicate != a duplicate and that while duplicate == duplicate we should be looking for if a duplicate != duplicate from anywhere in the previous tree?
    – Travis J
    Mar 31, 2014 at 22:23
  • 1
    finally it got closed as duplicate! Luckily not as a chained duplicate :-P
    – donfuxx
    Mar 31, 2014 at 23:52
  • By the way, your title is off by a duplicate. Apr 1, 2014 at 19:07
  • 1
    I seem to be seeing this more often. Example: this question today. Is this actually desirable? The first dupe does have good answer, but so does the dupe of the dupe. Should these be merged at some point? Oct 24, 2014 at 20:51

2 Answers 2

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  1. What is the currently longest duplicates chain on Stack Overflow?

Infinite, see next part.

  1. Is it actually possible to create a duplicate-loop?

Yes. See here.

Okay, to be serious: this question is a duplicate of this question which is a duplicate of the first question. There's a bunch of other cases of this linked to in this query I made: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/179727/duplicate-chains.

3
  • I was working on something similar and it was clear when I kept hitting recursion limits (32,767) that there are probably some very lengthy chains. Some posts appear thousands of times on their own - though at the high end those are most likely all duplicate targets.
    – Aaron Bertrand Staff
    Mar 31, 2014 at 22:55
  • a duplicate of itself... I would say that condition is always true. Will have to flag a lot of questions as duplicates :-P
    – donfuxx
    Apr 1, 2014 at 17:37
  • I am dissatisfied with the answer to the question... actually 3 questions, more precisely the "why" of it. These chains only cause confusion and do not help anyone. They should be merged. And if the questions are different enough to warrant different answers, then they are not duplicates. Apr 20, 2016 at 10:25
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I think you need to look a little closer to see how this happened in this specific case.

Your first question, asked over two years ago, was marked as a duplicate by a moderator on January 12 at 2:08 AM UTC:

enter image description here

Your second question, at that time, was not a duplicate yet. It was subsequently - over 12 hours later - closed as a duplicate by five community members, who likely didn't know about the other closure:

enter image description here

There are a couple of things here worth mentioning.

  1. It should perhaps be more obvious that a question has been identified as the target for closure of another question - if that happened in the past. In this case, obviously, it was not "another question that is already a duplicate" (emphasis mine).

  2. I don't feel the software should prevent these chains. Especially when questions have been around for varying amounts of time, have collected their own different answers, etc. I don't feel that all questions closed as a duplicate should necessarily point to the same master question unless it really is a very good canonical question (and that's something the community should decide, not the system). I bring this up a lot but in my field (SQL Server) we often have questions that have good answers for older versions, but for newer versions there are better, newer answers on different questions. I would rather close the new question as a duplicate of the newer, better question with its better answer, even knowing that I can't control that question from itself later being closed as a duplicate of the older question. It is still good to have the user follow through that better post, with a chance they may read it (and any comments about why it's better on the modern version), than to skip it altogether because "chaining is bad."

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