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Firstly, there's a mismatch between the advertised goals of SO ("With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.""With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.") and the way it works "Ask questions, get answers, no distractions" with whole reputation mechanism is purely based on asking questions and writing answers, biased towards writing answers. (In addition "every question about programming" doesn't mention anything about duplicates.)

Another example, is that it's not always easy to find an exact duplicate. Take this questionthis question I answered a few days ago. When I first read it, I thought there was no way it wasn't a duplicate, so I started to look for them. Yet, I couldn't find anything specifically about installing the JDK (as opposed to the JRE) (it also became clear that some of the elements in the comments were also relevant, and made it slightly different to what had been asked before). So, OK, I got 1 upvote out of this, but frankly, I don't care that much, considering the time I've been on SO and the rep I have, getting 10 points is good, but I don't get massively excited about it.

Firstly, there's a mismatch between the advertised goals of SO ("With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.") and the way it works "Ask questions, get answers, no distractions" with whole reputation mechanism is purely based on asking questions and writing answers, biased towards writing answers. (In addition "every question about programming" doesn't mention anything about duplicates.)

Another example, is that it's not always easy to find an exact duplicate. Take this question I answered a few days ago. When I first read it, I thought there was no way it wasn't a duplicate, so I started to look for them. Yet, I couldn't find anything specifically about installing the JDK (as opposed to the JRE) (it also became clear that some of the elements in the comments were also relevant, and made it slightly different to what had been asked before). So, OK, I got 1 upvote out of this, but frankly, I don't care that much, considering the time I've been on SO and the rep I have, getting 10 points is good, but I don't get massively excited about it.

Firstly, there's a mismatch between the advertised goals of SO ("With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.") and the way it works "Ask questions, get answers, no distractions" with whole reputation mechanism is purely based on asking questions and writing answers, biased towards writing answers. (In addition "every question about programming" doesn't mention anything about duplicates.)

Another example, is that it's not always easy to find an exact duplicate. Take this question I answered a few days ago. When I first read it, I thought there was no way it wasn't a duplicate, so I started to look for them. Yet, I couldn't find anything specifically about installing the JDK (as opposed to the JRE) (it also became clear that some of the elements in the comments were also relevant, and made it slightly different to what had been asked before). So, OK, I got 1 upvote out of this, but frankly, I don't care that much, considering the time I've been on SO and the rep I have, getting 10 points is good, but I don't get massively excited about it.

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Bruno
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Firstly, there's a mismatch between the advertised goals of SO ("With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.") and the way it works "Ask questions, get answers, no distractions" with whole reputation mechanism is purely based on asking questions and writing answers, biased towards writing answers. (In addition "every question about programming" doesn't mention anything about duplicates.)

Reputation aside, many of us who provide answers just do it mostly because they're quite happy helping people and sharing what they know. (Other side effect: some questions can be intellectually challenging, and it's also a good exercise to practice explaining something to someone else.)

Very few duplicates are exact duplicates. There's often something slightly different in the context, or the way the question is asked. I tend to try to tailor my answers to each question, so that it matches the exact problem in the question. This gives the reader (OP or someone else) a better flow to understand the issues in general. Duplicates tend to break that. There was a time were answers to duplicates were moved semi-automatically to the duplicate target, but that's often unsatisfactory in practice: reading the original question and the answers to the duplicate didn't always completely make sense.

"is Java pass by reference" as a standalone question is a bit obvious, but was the full question an exact duplicate? (I suppose in such a simple case it can be.) There are also often little details around that makes the whole Q&A more useful to anyone reading it more useful.

Name calling those who answer such questions just doesn't help. Most answerers do it to help, for free. Those who do it purely for the points are merely playing the game that's put in front of them. Of course, that's why you're suggesting altering those reward rules. The problem is that there's always going to be some grey area of questions that actually are not perfect matches and that someone will have spent time writing a possibly good answer for. That could clearly be unfair on those who spend time trying to help.

Another example, is that it's not always easy to find an exact duplicate. Take this question I answered a few days ago. When I first read it, I thought there was no way it wasn't a duplicate, so I started to look for them. Yet, I couldn't find anything specifically about installing the JDK (as opposed to the JRE) (it also became clear that some of the elements in the comments were also relevant, and made it slightly different to what had been asked before). So, OK, I got 1 upvote out of this, but frankly, I don't care that much, considering the time I've been on SO and the rep I have, getting 10 points is good, but I don't get massively excited about it.

There is of course the notion of canonical questions. Those are a good idea in principle, but SO and its gaming system don't really work well for them.

  • The "canonical" question might be a good idea in principle, but such a question often includes more notions than asked in the question, or at least presented sufficiently differently that the OP won't necessarily understand it. Closing a duplicate towards a canonical question is about as helpful as pointing to a blog in a link-only answer saying ("Try this: http://...").

  • There's no real way of merging existing answers and rewarding the initial authors fairly. Sure, one can copy and paste elements of duplicate answers together into a canonical answer, but you then take the points when others have effectively done most of the research and writing for you. That's just not right, and even if you someone keep the link to credit the initial answers, the authorship trace becomes very tangled (not even sure that would be compatible with the licence). I know editing is encouraged on SO, but editing and authoring are different concepts that are presented in fundamentally different ways (this is why edits that change the answer substantially are discouraged).

I know duplicates can sometimes be annoying, but they're always easier to identify as such when you already know what the cause of the problem is.