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There are lots of questions asked each day which are due to the asker not knowing about the basic concept of references, this one being a Python example. I've answered a couple of them myself.

Since references is a concept rather than some API, and the question rarely mentions that concept, I really doubt this will help others coming from Google.

Are such questions useful? How should one deal with such questions?

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    Those kind of questions will forever keep coming, always looking different. Just keep a reference question handy with an answer that addresses the core problem so you can quickly close them as a duplicate. If you don't have such a Q+A available then write one. Oct 16, 2014 at 16:22
  • There used to be a halfway decent closing code for "didn't read the documentation", but they took it away in the last closing code massacre.
    – Hot Licks
    Oct 17, 2014 at 17:20
  • I would consider also tagging these with [reference-vs-value] or something like that. Oct 17, 2014 at 23:26

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For better or worse, the information that we collect on Stack Overflow is mostly conceptual information hidden behind numerous code troubleshooting stumbles.

The way we integrate such questions is to find duplicates which we can close them against, which I see has already been done. If a high-quality canonical/reference post that a neophyte can understand does not exist, consider creating one for this purpose.

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    It is incredibly hard to find duplicates for many common questions, in large part because the dupes are so common and so poor that none gets answered or upvoted to allow it to be used as a dupe.
    – Hot Licks
    Oct 17, 2014 at 17:22
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    That's a good observation. I don't have an obvious solution, beyond someone taking the time to create a good quality, self-answered canonical/reference question (that's a good solution, actually). Oct 17, 2014 at 17:23
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    @HotLicks: as an example of this sort of question/answer, see What is a NullReferenceException and how do I fix it?, if I do say so myself. Oct 17, 2014 at 23:25
  • @RobertHarvey Some SO denizens are actively opposed to creating new self-answered canonical questions. They will downvote because it is not their question and answer. Even if none of the previous duplicate questions are suitable as a canonical question.
    – Raedwald
    Oct 21, 2014 at 7:05
  • @Raedwald: I can't imagine why. There isn't anything objectionable about a well-written canonical question/answer pair. Nothing whatsoever. If people are downvoting because it's not their question/answer, they're kinda missing the point. Oct 21, 2014 at 15:24
  • @RobertHarvey - I made an attempt to create a self-answered canonical question a few days ago, and several people down-voted it almost immediately, because it was self-answered.
    – Hot Licks
    Oct 31, 2014 at 23:17

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