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A question can be asked in many different ways. Is it OK to create a question for almost every way of asking that question and then mark it as a duplicate of a canonical question?

Why I'm asking is because it would be great to always get a good Stack Overflow result for whatever query I might type at Google.

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    If you mean you want to ask questions only to have them closed as duplicates of others, then no, thanks. May 5, 2014 at 23:24
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    Ref: How to check if two strings are the same in C#? (10K+ only) May 5, 2014 at 23:47
  • Do note that while you might have done it with the best of intentions, simply googling for "compare strings c#" (which is the subject in question) will show you 4 different MSDN resources first with 3 Stack Overflow resources next. I think this is more than enough. May 5, 2014 at 23:47
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    Did you consider creating a word press site with all the various combinations and then linking into SO from there?
    – Gayot Fow
    May 5, 2014 at 23:57
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    Claim: there are an infinite ways to present the same question.
    – MxLDevs
    May 27, 2014 at 15:25

1 Answer 1

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Creating "Alias" questions isn't a good idea. Let me explain why.

The motivation to create these questions isn't wrong at all! Many things are asked in a way that make you go, "I would never have found this in a search!" The thought of creating a better pointer for future Googlers is completely understandable.

However, on Stack Exchange, this is generally done organically. When someone actually asks the question in their own way, that question then gets closed as a duplicate, creating a "naturally grown" pointer.

This generally works fine - and when it doesn't, that's owed to there being more duplicates than the people closing the questions can handle. That's why artificially creating even more duplicates is generally frowned upon, as is witnessed by Frédéric Hamidi's comment above.

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