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Introduction

I'm guessing this applies to all tags, but in we currently have issues where new questions are marked as being duplicates of older, not very well written, questions.

Surely, the old question was first, but it sometimes feel like it would be better to start off from scratch, writing a question that is generic enough to include minor varaities of it, and not include too much "so this is my exact, and utterly useless, story related to the question"-snippets.


An example

This one linked below is often being used to mark new questions as duplicates of it.

The title is very descriptive, and can't be any more generic; but the contents of the questions is a mess, which I feel can cause confusion for novice readers, which means that they are likely to just create another question because they don't understand it how it's relevant to their first one.


Questions

  • Should one create a new generic and well-written question, and close the old one as a duplicate of that?

  • Should one edit the old question, editing out the OPs original intent, to make it a generic "base" for new questions?

  • Should one leave it as it is, even though it's mad ugly and/or confusing?

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    Please don't duplicate content. I see no reason why editing the old question could not be an effective solution. Jun 7, 2014 at 0:11
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    @HansPassant because it's an intrusive edit, changing the meaning of the post that the original OP's made, that is my concern. Jun 7, 2014 at 3:59
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    The person who asked the question already got their answer. There's nothing wrong with editing the question to make it clearer and/or more general. Don't go through the trouble of creating a new question unless the old question is unsalvageable via editing. Jun 7, 2014 at 6:26
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    Your question is self-contradictory. Any "utterly useless story related to the question" can obviously be edited out without changing the meaning of the question.
    – Fred Foo
    Jun 7, 2014 at 9:47
  • @larsmans maybe that was a poor choice of words from my part, what I mean is that the post contains information on which a question is asked, in one removes such info "everyything" changes. The text is not required when a dupe is closed, but when reading the original Q&A; it is. Jun 7, 2014 at 10:33
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    Here's another relevant question. The timing is impeccable :). The comments explain the specifics.
    – Veedrac
    Jun 7, 2014 at 10:35
  • wrt. the previously linked question; a decision was later made that it should be the canonical example. It was previously marked duplicate (by me, a few hours ago) of this.
    – Veedrac
    Jun 7, 2014 at 17:18
  • I just suggested here (and then saw this related post) that the asker of a higher quality duplicate should be encouraged to edit the original, that has high quality answers already. A flag for mod or pseudo-close-vote that this question should replace that one would also be good in my opinion.
    – OJFord
    Jul 26, 2014 at 15:47

2 Answers 2

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Should one create a new generic and well-written question, and close the old one as a duplicate of that?

Definitely that. The core thing that should drive this decision is usefulness to the readers. Having a canonical reference is great and really helps users.

This is a strategy users in the and tags use extensively, to great success.

Here are some good examples where there were duplicates, but they were not generic enough or well written enough:

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    That served as a great inspirational post, I actually look forward to cleaning up the mess in c++ now; thanks. Jun 6, 2014 at 21:46
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    @Rapptz I don't think Benjamin's answer is a reply to that specific debate, even if I used that one as an example in my post; I interpret his text as a general "this is the way to go"-answer. Jun 6, 2014 at 21:48
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    We also maintain our own list of often asked duplicates room-11.github.io/canonical.html
    – PeeHaa
    Jun 6, 2014 at 22:10
  • The only problem I see with this is that there are already too many posts pointing to the linked post. If we just close the linked post as a duplicate of the new one, all of those would take 2 steps (instead of 1) to reach the best answer. I wonder if a mass-change-of-duplicate-target is possible / viable / a good idea. Jun 7, 2014 at 0:24
  • @Dukeling well, there is merging but it is very drastic as the questions are effectively only very similar but not rea`lly identical. Jun 7, 2014 at 10:38
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Question: Should one create a new generic and well-written question, and close the old one as a duplicate of that?

  • Answer: I agree. However, we would need a creditable mechanism for this to happen. For example, a voting mechanism could be devised where according to number of votes an old question would have been deleted in favour of the new improved and generic one.

Question: Should one edit the old question, editing out the OPs original intent, to make it a generic "base" for new questions?

  • Answer: I believe this shouldn't be the job of one person, but rather of an informal comity, where again edit would have to be voted and if a certain amount of votes is reached the edit would be approved.

Question: Should one leave it as it is, even though it's mad ugly and/or confusing?

  • Answer: As Winston Churchill once said "Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others." Aligned with this quote, I think that we shouldn't be afraid of changes, even if they're radical ones, provided that the decisions for making these changes are taken in a collective manner. I have the belief that through polyphony we are able to end up to the right conclusion.

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