For some time now, when asking a question, you may not give it a title that has been used before.
When you do, you get a popup saying:
A question with that title already exists; please be more specific.
I'm curious: what problem does this approach solve, does it actually solve it, and are its negative effects cancelled by the positive ones?
I'm asking because as an editor who hardly ever asks a question, it does me more harm than good. Examples:
- Wanting to remove tags and buzzwords from a title, leaving me with the error. Probably the reason the OP added them in the first place.
- Wanting to change a title like "Help my code doesn't work" into something that at least generally covers what's being asked in the question (for example: "Access Denied while trying to read a file"), so later visitors, editors and reviewers can better decide what they're about to read.
At the moment I'm editing such a title, I don't care that it's a duplicate, and I see at least some kind of merit in keeping the question on the site (in other words: at that moment I'm not doing some turd polishing).
So why are we not allowed to enter a title that has been used before?
Related:
Undefined index
is popular, but not quite to 'dozens' -- presumably the rest were deleted.) I'm interested to hear the official rationale, though.