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As a dupehammer wielder, I have to be more careful about dupes now... So, here's a question where the premise is broken

Encryption & Decryption

The correct solution to the op's problem is not what the user is trying to do, and their XY approach has led them to ask the wrong question.

Do I close as a duplicate? To me the well upvoted answers represent misinformation in the context of the actual problem trying to be solved.

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  • I don't think you should close as a duplicate if it's really isn't. You have done well providing a comment - that's what they are for but to resolve current OP's problem the solutions are given in the answers. I have had similar cases in VBA and Excel when a users asks for a macro to count something but another quesiton/answer achieves the same thing using a formula - just leave it open as someone else may come across this question and then they will see your upvoted comment.
    – user2140173
    Jul 4, 2014 at 9:38

1 Answer 1

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If it isn't a duplicate, then don't close it as one. There are lots and lots of similar questions with similar answers that are still not duplicates...

That said, don't let this stop you from leaning heavily on an existing answer posted to a related question. If you can get away with a short introduction relating the asker's problem to the answer that you then quote, go for it - cross-linking is good!

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