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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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For the title What's the difference using 'var f = function(a)' and 'function f(a)'? the Lucene-based textual similarity thingy returns results based on the relatively meaningless terms What's, var and even f.

Bad "more-like-this" results are a fact of life, as I once answeredonce answered using Stack Overflow as an example.

IMO, it's an honest mistake. When I query Google, my choice of words and phrases may lead to a Stack Overflow post that was marked duplicate. I guess duplicate questions may serve as SEO by increasing the surface area of SO that is reachable from Google.

For the title What's the difference using 'var f = function(a)' and 'function f(a)'? the Lucene-based textual similarity thingy returns results based on the relatively meaningless terms What's, var and even f.

Bad "more-like-this" results are a fact of life, as I once answered using Stack Overflow as an example.

IMO, it's an honest mistake. When I query Google, my choice of words and phrases may lead to a Stack Overflow post that was marked duplicate. I guess duplicate questions may serve as SEO by increasing the surface area of SO that is reachable from Google.

For the title What's the difference using 'var f = function(a)' and 'function f(a)'? the Lucene-based textual similarity thingy returns results based on the relatively meaningless terms What's, var and even f.

Bad "more-like-this" results are a fact of life, as I once answered using Stack Overflow as an example.

IMO, it's an honest mistake. When I query Google, my choice of words and phrases may lead to a Stack Overflow post that was marked duplicate. I guess duplicate questions may serve as SEO by increasing the surface area of SO that is reachable from Google.

Copy edited. (its = possessive, it's = "it is" or "it has". See for example <http://www.wikihow.com/Use-its-and-it's>.) Used the official name of Stack Overflow - see section "Proper Use of the Stack Exchange Name" in http://stackoverflow.com/legal/trademark-guidance (the last section).
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Peter Mortensen
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For the title WhatsWhat's the difference using var'var f = function(a)' and function'function f(a)'? the LuceneLucene-based textual similarity thingy returns results based on the relatively meaningless terms What's, var and even f.

Bad "more like this"-like-this" results are a fact of life, as I once answered using StackOverflowStack Overflow as an example.

IMO its a, it's an honest mistake. When I query Google, my choice of words and phrases may lead to a SOStack Overflow post that was marked duplicate. I guess duplicate questions may serve as SEOSEO by increasing the surface area of SOSO that is reachable from Google.

For the title Whats the difference using var f = function(a) and function f(a) the Lucene-based textual similarity thingy returns results based on the relatively meaningless terms What's, var and even f.

Bad "more like this" results are a fact of life, as I once answered using StackOverflow as an example.

IMO its a honest mistake. When I query Google, my choice of words and phrases may lead to a SO post that was marked duplicate. I guess duplicate questions may serve as SEO by increasing the surface area of SO that is reachable from Google.

For the title What's the difference using 'var f = function(a)' and 'function f(a)'? the Lucene-based textual similarity thingy returns results based on the relatively meaningless terms What's, var and even f.

Bad "more-like-this" results are a fact of life, as I once answered using Stack Overflow as an example.

IMO, it's an honest mistake. When I query Google, my choice of words and phrases may lead to a Stack Overflow post that was marked duplicate. I guess duplicate questions may serve as SEO by increasing the surface area of SO that is reachable from Google.

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Jesvin Jose
  • 23k
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  • 6

For the title Whats the difference using var f = function(a) and function f(a) the Lucene-based textual similarity thingy returns results based on the relatively meaningless terms What's, var and even f.

Bad "more like this" results are a fact of life, as I once answered using StackOverflow as an example.

IMO its a honest mistake. When I query Google, my choice of words and phrases may lead to a SO post that was marked duplicate. I guess duplicate questions may serve as SEO by increasing the surface area of SO that is reachable from Google.