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Oct 9, 2015 at 14:28 comment added Justin Morgan This doesn't give any recourse to the guy trying to get his question answered. If he knew the correct answer, he wouldn't have needed to ask it in the first place. It might not be relevant in this case, and it sounds like OP knows what's missing, but in a lot of cases this would prevent the asker from getting the info he needs. Let's be honest, an accepted answer on an old question is unlikely to get much scrutiny.
Jun 17, 2014 at 22:35 comment added Cody Gray Mod Questions like those Mystical describes shouldn't even have been answered in the first place. They should be downvoted, closed, and subsequently deleted. If that were happening like it should, there'd be no way to close future questions as duplicates of crap.
Jun 17, 2014 at 18:38 comment added Mysticial You dupe the old messy question to the new canonical one. Or you can close or delete it. You tell me: How would you edit and broaden a question in a way that would invalidate all the answers? Make the edit and then flag all the answers as NAA? I don't think that's gonna settle well... This happens all the time if the answers only address the problem in the OP's 100-line extremely localized example - when it is better to replace that example with a 5-liner that best illustrates the problem or error condition that people will be googling for?
Jun 17, 2014 at 18:31 comment added Anthony Pegram @Mysticial, how exactly does leaving the previous "horrible state" alone help anyone, though? It leads directly into Cody Gray's point, the old (apparently broken) question is still a result in Google. Fix it, don't duplicate it.
Jun 17, 2014 at 18:08 comment added Mysticial Quite often, the old question is in such a horrible state that it's simply better to start anew rather than trying to clean up all the confusing (and upvoted) answers on the old question. This is especially the case if editing the question into a better state would invalidate many of the answers.
Jun 17, 2014 at 17:25 history answered Cody GrayMod CC BY-SA 3.0