Summary
A user did research, couldn't find an answer, and asks a question. The new question is closed as a duplicate, but he can't understand the answer provided on the original. How should we alter the answer(s) on the target question such that they'll satisfy those asking duplicates?
Background
Recently a user came into chat and brought up a valid point. He was upset his question was marked as duplicate even though the answers on the non-duplicate question didn't fix his problem. This was the question is marked as a duplicate of this question(note there will likely be further edits to the questions by the time I post this). He was correct. The question he asked was NOT answered by the duplicate one. Although the answers were similar. It's a classic case of "Because you know the answer it looks obvious but to those who don't..."
I played devils advocate and found it interesting. Someone said "knowing the correct properties is certainly useful" and I countered with "That's the thing! If you know the correct properties you wouldn't be on the question in the first place."
What we tried
BradleyDotNET did his best to resolve this by editing the accepted answer on the target question to add a link to additional documentation on the properties being referenced. But OP wasn't satisfied because it wasn't obvious to him that the link answered his question either. Examining this from the user's point of view, I can see how the link could easily be ignored as not relevant or just not seen.
So, what is a good strategy for including more information on the subject so that very similar questions can be answered by one main answer?