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replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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Well, actually you can use all of them. The link generated by the share button under the question doesn't 'look nice', but it does make you eligible for the Announcer badge - the last part of the URL is your user ID.

The URL you see in the address bar includes the question's title, which is important for SEO reasons, but in fact it doesn't matter what the last part (after the question number) is. The following URLs all point to this question:

http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/what-address-url-should-be-used-for-sharing-a-question
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/test
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/donald-trump-has-a-nice-haircut
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/335640/4751173
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/335640/test

The function of the noredirect parameter is to prevent automatic forwarding, as explained herehere. You might not experience this, but anonymous users visiting a duplicate question with no answer are forwarded to the dupe target automatically (they might not understand how duplicate questions work on Stack Exchange).

The lq parameter indicates that you visited via the 'Linked question' section. I'm not sure what's done with this but I guess it measures the effectiveness of this section. There's a related rq parameter for the 'Related questions'.

the one that will most likely persist over time?

That's almost impossible for us to answer, but given Stack Exchange's hatred for broken links, you can be sure that all link forms will be supported for a long, long time (6-8 centuries)(6-8 centuries).

Well, actually you can use all of them. The link generated by the share button under the question doesn't 'look nice', but it does make you eligible for the Announcer badge - the last part of the URL is your user ID.

The URL you see in the address bar includes the question's title, which is important for SEO reasons, but in fact it doesn't matter what the last part (after the question number) is. The following URLs all point to this question:

http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/what-address-url-should-be-used-for-sharing-a-question
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/test
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/donald-trump-has-a-nice-haircut
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/335640/4751173
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/335640/test

The function of the noredirect parameter is to prevent automatic forwarding, as explained here. You might not experience this, but anonymous users visiting a duplicate question with no answer are forwarded to the dupe target automatically (they might not understand how duplicate questions work on Stack Exchange).

The lq parameter indicates that you visited via the 'Linked question' section. I'm not sure what's done with this but I guess it measures the effectiveness of this section. There's a related rq parameter for the 'Related questions'.

the one that will most likely persist over time?

That's almost impossible for us to answer, but given Stack Exchange's hatred for broken links, you can be sure that all link forms will be supported for a long, long time (6-8 centuries).

Well, actually you can use all of them. The link generated by the share button under the question doesn't 'look nice', but it does make you eligible for the Announcer badge - the last part of the URL is your user ID.

The URL you see in the address bar includes the question's title, which is important for SEO reasons, but in fact it doesn't matter what the last part (after the question number) is. The following URLs all point to this question:

http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/what-address-url-should-be-used-for-sharing-a-question
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/test
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/donald-trump-has-a-nice-haircut
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/335640/4751173
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/335640/test

The function of the noredirect parameter is to prevent automatic forwarding, as explained here. You might not experience this, but anonymous users visiting a duplicate question with no answer are forwarded to the dupe target automatically (they might not understand how duplicate questions work on Stack Exchange).

The lq parameter indicates that you visited via the 'Linked question' section. I'm not sure what's done with this but I guess it measures the effectiveness of this section. There's a related rq parameter for the 'Related questions'.

the one that will most likely persist over time?

That's almost impossible for us to answer, but given Stack Exchange's hatred for broken links, you can be sure that all link forms will be supported for a long, long time (6-8 centuries).

Source Link
Glorfindel
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Well, actually you can use all of them. The link generated by the share button under the question doesn't 'look nice', but it does make you eligible for the Announcer badge - the last part of the URL is your user ID.

The URL you see in the address bar includes the question's title, which is important for SEO reasons, but in fact it doesn't matter what the last part (after the question number) is. The following URLs all point to this question:

http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/what-address-url-should-be-used-for-sharing-a-question
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/test
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/335640/donald-trump-has-a-nice-haircut
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/335640/4751173
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/335640/test

The function of the noredirect parameter is to prevent automatic forwarding, as explained here. You might not experience this, but anonymous users visiting a duplicate question with no answer are forwarded to the dupe target automatically (they might not understand how duplicate questions work on Stack Exchange).

The lq parameter indicates that you visited via the 'Linked question' section. I'm not sure what's done with this but I guess it measures the effectiveness of this section. There's a related rq parameter for the 'Related questions'.

the one that will most likely persist over time?

That's almost impossible for us to answer, but given Stack Exchange's hatred for broken links, you can be sure that all link forms will be supported for a long, long time (6-8 centuries).