Debugging-help questions usually have this format:
I am trying to do stuff.
I wrote this code:
stuff code
But it does not do stuff, it goes bleh instead. What went wrong?
Sometimes the cause of the stuff going bleh is clearly identifiable as a common issue which has already received extremely good answers.
Such an example is a mismanagement/misunderstanding of JavaScript closures and contexts which has already received some famous answers (and has probably spawned thousands of questions and headaches).
I have thought of multiple ways to react:
- Commenting with a link to the super answers
- Answering and solving the issue with a link to the super answers
- Flagging as duplicate (and probably commenting)
I'm a bit puzzled, I don't know if I should answer such questions and I don't know if I should go as far as flagging as duplicate.
What is the best thing to do with these questions?
According to the community-accepted answers below, questions like this should be closed as duplicates of the root cause issue.
Funnily enough it's in direct contradiction of this question posted eleven months before. The accepted answers to both questions are the same, but the community seems to strongly disagree...
Spread the chain. When in May of 2016 someone asks this same question and it gets answered in a different way, point them here.