- New usersuser wants to know "How can I
foo
the bar
?"
- If we're very lucky, they bother to search for it and find the answer "Use the
baz
library".
- They think "but I can't use
baz
because [reasons]", so they ask "How can I foo
the bar
?" and are, for some reason, astonished when it gets closed as a duplicate.
Can you spot the mistake? Had they asked "How can I foo
the bar
without baz
?", and the first paragraph included "I've read 'How can I foo
the bar
', but I can't use baz
because [reasons], so..."[reasons]", then we're away. Try another one:
- New usersuser wants to know "How can I
foo
the bar
?"
- If we're very lucky, they bother to search for it and find the answer "there's already a
Fooing
class for bar
s".
- They think "but I don't know about the
Fooing
class", so they ask "How can I foo
the bar
?" and are, for some reason, astonished when it gets closed as a duplicate.
Obviously, there are other, similar cases. If you just ask the same question again because you didn't understand the existing answers, then beBe specific about what you didn't understand, and mention the source material so others can understand your problem. If you just ask the same question again and it doesn't get put on-hold, you will probably get the same answers and still not be able to understand them.