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Jul 27, 2016 at 5:16 vote accept samgak
Jun 21, 2016 at 13:32 comment added Joshua Taylor Related to these kinds of questions are the kind where knowing what term to search for turns up the answer immediately, but not knowing makes it very difficult to search for. These can be usually closed as duplicates, but these are duplicates that I usually end up upvoting, because they don't necessarily show lack of research effort, and because having more signposts to a canonical answer helps a lot.
Jun 20, 2016 at 16:42 comment added Heretic Monkey @Basilevs I think you think the argument is moot, not mute ;).
Jun 20, 2016 at 16:40 comment added J... @Basilevs I considered that, but I'm really not sure. Natural language descriptions are ususally going to involve some sort of generic example and everyone will use different wording in different ways... it's such an abstract expression that I think it would be exceedingly difficult for any search algorithm to find general traction with. Consider an example of 3-Dimensional Matching - try to find that using Google without using "3-dimensional matching" as a search term. How would you do it?
Jun 20, 2016 at 16:36 comment added Basilevs I think an argument about "hard to find" is mute. As long as there is enough duplicates with different wording, future readers would instantly Google out the question using natural language terms they know.
Jun 20, 2016 at 12:38 comment added PM 2Ring While I sympathise with the OPs of such questions, I agree that they aren't much use for future readers, for the reasons stated in your 3rd paragraph. So I tend to close-vote as to broad, but I leave a comment mentioning the name of the algorithm (usually with a Wikipedia link) and also links to relevant SO question(s). I also agree that Chat is a much better venue for this type of question.
Jun 19, 2016 at 15:18 history answered J... CC BY-SA 3.0