There is a canonical question and answers, Is floating point math broken? for why there are rounding errors on floating point arithmetic. If a question asks why there are floating point rounding errors, I fully agree with closing as a duplicate of that question.
There is a subtly different type of question, example Java float precision, that asks about options to handle the consequences of rounding error in a specific situation. As the OP for the example question said in a comment while it was marked as a duplicate "I want a solution not an explanation why this is happening.".
In my opinion, answering those questions would add to the usefulness of the site, by building a database of practical advice programmers could apply if they have the same situation.
There seems to be a current policy of rapidly closing any Java question that asks how to handle floating point rounding as a duplicate of "Is floating point math broken?". It seems to be a reflex reaction to seeing floating point rounding errors mentioned in a question, without thinking about whether the claimed duplicate really answers the new question.
Possibly, we could add all the situation-specific advice to the canonical duplicate. There are two problems with that. First, it just asks why the issue exists - advice for handling rounding error is not responsive to that question. Second, finding the advice for a specific case would be a linear search through all the answers to that question, not a database lookup the way StackOverflow is supposed to operate.
Can anything be done to stop this? Perhaps impose a waiting period on marking as a duplicate in this particular case, so that people can see if the question has question-specific answers?