Find/create a good canonical and close them as duplicate is the obvious move. However, be sure to treat each question on a case by case basis.
Because two questions have the same title doesn't make them duplicates.
Quite often askers are not in the best position to put a good title on their questions, and multiple questions with approximately the same title could actually ask for very different things.
Here is a non exhaustive list of the kind of questions you may face during your task:
The common case.
Nothing fancy, a common set of constraints and a simple application; just what makes everyone struggling with the subject matter.
This will represent what 95% of users will want to find, this is the one that absolutely needs a good canonical because it will also be the one we'll see the most.
If we keep OP's original request, that would be all the questions that read
How do I get the coordinates of a mouse click on a canvas element?
I have a <canvas> relatively positioned in my page that can scroll...
There are multiple possible answers to this question, and all have their merit. So it's important they are all accessible under the same post.
=> close as dupe of the canonical.
The (less-common) obvious case.
There may be some special case which make the common case solutions not fit perfectly because the situation has less restrictive constraints.
In OP's case that would be questions like
How do I get the coordinates of a mouse click on a canvas element?
I have a full-screen <canvas>...
Here I'd personally say that the common case may still help, and unless there is a clear mention that they don't want it (e.g because they don't want the overhead of grabbing the relative position of the element), then closing as dupe of the canonical is still ok. (You may want to add a comment explaining your rational / asking them if they absolutely want the particular case).
The above common case
This is where the common case isn't enough because the situation involves some stronger constraints.
For instance that could be
How do I get the coordinates of a mouse click on a canvas element?
I made my own projection system, however I fail to link it correctly with the mouse events...
(A real-life example is OP's own question which does have a better title than the average, but still...)
Most often, the common case is already known, and correctly applied here.
Closing as dupe of the common case is thus utterly wrong in these cases.
The debugging case
This one is where the asker actually didn't need at all what their title asks, but because that's what they were doing at this time, it's what they gave us.
A common example would be
How do I get the coordinates of a mouse click on a canvas element?
I used the code from /questions/3141592653 but it doesn't work. The console keep saying "Can't call method getBoundingClientRect of null"...
These questions most probably already have canonical, but it's not the one of the common case.
So edit their title if possible, vote to close accordingly, but do not mark them as duplicate of "How to do X". That's not what they are about.
&:
in Ruby, for example, but a search doesn't show them. So, even if an asker makes a genuine attempt at finding a duplicate, they aren't able to. And the duplicate question logic in the ask question form also doesn't show them. As an experiment, I even copy&pasted an entire question's markdown source code into the question box once, and that question wasn't suggested as a duplicate!ruby "&:"
just fine. SO's own search was never considered a serious feature.&:
tagged with ruby but not ruby-on-rails and 10 votes" in Google? In Stack Overflow search, that is trivial, except the quality of the results is crap. For me, that returns 4 results, none of which have anything to do with&:
.