Don't close big questions as duplicates of small ones, improve the big one instead
I recommend not closing big questions (lots of votes/views/answers) as duplicates of smaller ones, regardless of which one was asked first, but rather the other way around, with the following rationale.
First, when a question is big, it means that more people have contributed to it with answers, comments and votes. Therefore, by closing it, you are wasting the time of more people who have contributed to the larger one, which makes people not want to contribute anymore.
Every big question has 10 small duplicates, which are extremely hard to find all of. Therefore, it is extremely hard to determine which of those 10 small questions is the best canonical based on best answers. If a gold badge user comes along and somehow determines that one of those small ones is the canonical, the choice is extremely unpredictable to other users. This makes it extremely hard to determine where to contribute to.
Next, the big old question always has the higher Google Pagerank. Therefore, people will land there first, and it is more productive if instead we correct existing answers with edits, possibly linking to better answers, or write new better answers, rather than requiring users to click the duplicate link.
What often happens is that the big old question is closed because a new library/language version became available and provided a better answer, or invalidated old ones. And the new question has a few highly upvoted answers, with the new shiny answer newer to the top.
But this does not scale. Imagine that in the future, the small answer becomes big, and yet another library/language feature comes along and becomes the better answer. What will we do then? Create a third one? This is messy.
Also, not all people might have access to the newest version of said library, so maybe the old answers still have some value.
This is why I recommend to always stick to the the big one, and concentrate all information in one single more obvious place.
The underlying problem is of course that the answer sorting algorithm is too naive: direct upvote count. The real solution to the problem is to take into account the answer age: a newer answer with X votes should show up before an older answer with X votes, because it gets more votes per unit of time. SE developers must read this: https://www.evanmiller.org/how-not-to-sort-by-average-rating.html