I posted a question and answer using "Share your knowledge, Q&A format". This is the question - How to integrate OpenCV into Qt Creator Android project
My question was intended to be a canonical question. Since I've heard that duplicates are not necessarily in chronological order, but by usefulness, and since my answer is actually a complete how-to on how to achieve the integration of OpenCV, I wen't and marked the other questions as duplicates to my own.
However, later my own question was marked as a duplicate to one of the others. This is the reason that was stated:
It feels a little odd to post an extremely short question (which might get closed as it's written), post an answer yourself, then go out and vote to close other questions as dupes of it. ..if anything, all of those other questions have considerably more detail to them than this one does. This should probably be closed as a duplicate of one of them, really.
But at the same time, the other question has less useful answers. It seems its virtue is that the question has more text than mine, and that it is older, according to the one who marked it as duplicate.
But I don't really think my question should be any longer, because the long parts are in the answer. My question basically states what I will solve in the answer. I thought this was how "Share your knowledge, Q&A format" was supposed to be done. Or am I mistaken?
If people came to my question from Google, would they be served better by redirecting them to an older question with a less useful answer? Or is Google searchers looking to solve their problems being served better not the goal of exact duplicates?