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I pretty regularly browse the new questions on Stack Overflow and notice that an unbelievable number of questions are about NullPointerExceptions or floating point arithmetic. While for NullPointerException questions there is a bubble that pops up, there is not one for floating point arithmetic. I have a two part proposal for this

  1. There should be a bubble for floating point arithmetic

  2. People who ignore these bubbles (and other bubbles) should have a special punishment system for x number of questions that are obvious duplicates despite the bubble.

Is there a way this can be implemented?

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  • You are also asking for a special flag, aren't you?
    – user4639281
    Nov 13, 2016 at 2:12
  • @TinyGiant Yes.
    – Eli Sadoff
    Nov 13, 2016 at 2:15

1 Answer 1

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To your points:

  1. There already is a suggested questions popup when you create a new question. It could possibly be made much more accurate so that the results you expect to see do, but if users ignore it already on other questions, I'm not sure what else could garner their attention.

  2. I'm not a fan of necessarily punishing a user for not paying attention to the system-driven warning for duplicates, since it leaves a lot of unknown question space here.

    For example:

    • What is x? When do we say that after x duplicates, that this one is definitely the canonical and best question-answer collection? This can be a moving target, especially in a fast-developing technology where the canonical answer can change.
    • What is the punishment? Do we prevent them from asking questions? We already have limitations to that tune, so I don't see value in adding more on top of what already works rather nicely.

    • Users that ask a duplicate question may get a better answer than any preexisting questions could've offered here. By implementing this, we'd potentially cut off valuable knowledge which could be amalgamated later.

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    That's true. I just feel like there are so many "look at my code, why do I have a NullPointerException questions". While there are sometimes good questions about NullPointerExceptions, a lot of them are practically debug requests.
    – Eli Sadoff
    Nov 13, 2016 at 2:15
  • 1
    @EliSadoff: There are legitimate debug requests on NPEs out there which don't fall into the typical pattern; there's no reason to paint all of these questions with the same brush. That said, it's not something that can automatically be deciphered through a process like a script or anything like that.
    – Makoto
    Nov 13, 2016 at 2:25

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