Skip to main content
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

I noticed over the last few days that oneone particularparticular problemproblem keepskeeps showingshowing up. I went searching for a good canonical question to deal with all of these and wasn't satisfied with what I found.

I wrote up my own questionI wrote up my own question to hopefully serve as the solution to this. But it was quickly downvoted and marked as a duplicate of this questionthis question, which I had come across. I chose to go ahead and write this other question because I thought the answers to the duplicate, while correct, were lacking in information and the question could be generalized a bit to cover other cases of the same bug.

So here's what I'm wondering: under what circumstances should we write a canonical question and what could/should I do to improve the one I wrote?

I noticed over the last few days that one particular problem keeps showing up. I went searching for a good canonical question to deal with all of these and wasn't satisfied with what I found.

I wrote up my own question to hopefully serve as the solution to this. But it was quickly downvoted and marked as a duplicate of this question, which I had come across. I chose to go ahead and write this other question because I thought the answers to the duplicate, while correct, were lacking in information and the question could be generalized a bit to cover other cases of the same bug.

So here's what I'm wondering: under what circumstances should we write a canonical question and what could/should I do to improve the one I wrote?

I noticed over the last few days that one particular problem keeps showing up. I went searching for a good canonical question to deal with all of these and wasn't satisfied with what I found.

I wrote up my own question to hopefully serve as the solution to this. But it was quickly downvoted and marked as a duplicate of this question, which I had come across. I chose to go ahead and write this other question because I thought the answers to the duplicate, while correct, were lacking in information and the question could be generalized a bit to cover other cases of the same bug.

So here's what I'm wondering: under what circumstances should we write a canonical question and what could/should I do to improve the one I wrote?

Source Link
Mike Cluck
  • 32.5k
  • 23
  • 18

Procedure and requirements for writing a canonical question/answer

I noticed over the last few days that one particular problem keeps showing up. I went searching for a good canonical question to deal with all of these and wasn't satisfied with what I found.

I wrote up my own question to hopefully serve as the solution to this. But it was quickly downvoted and marked as a duplicate of this question, which I had come across. I chose to go ahead and write this other question because I thought the answers to the duplicate, while correct, were lacking in information and the question could be generalized a bit to cover other cases of the same bug.

So here's what I'm wondering: under what circumstances should we write a canonical question and what could/should I do to improve the one I wrote?