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A user, let's say "Chris", posted a question. Another user, let's say "Robin", with a gold badge in one of the tags, closed it as a duplicate. Chris edited the question to point out why closing it was wrong, it wasn't a duplicate.

Robin continues to interact with Chris in the comments, leaving the question closed. 30 minutes after closing, Robin re-opens the question and less than a minute after that, posts a three-paragraph answer along with a code snippet.

ItRobin couldn't have used SO's own answer functionality to prepare it as long as the question was closed, and it seems impossible to me that Robin managed to type this all up in less than a minute, and it seems like Robin used the. The fact that the questionit was closed to preventprevented others from answering, and it would have been easier even for Robin to re-open it as soon as it was clear it was not a duplicate.

This does not seem nice, yet it might not go against any rule we have here. What's the right way to handle this? Should it just be ignored, or should some action be taken to discourage this kind of behaviour?

Note: I do believe that at the time of closing, Robin believed the question was a duplicate.

A user, let's say "Chris", posted a question. Another user, let's say "Robin", with a gold badge in one of the tags, closed it as a duplicate. Chris edited the question to point out why closing it was wrong, it wasn't a duplicate.

Robin continues to interact with Chris in the comments, leaving the question closed. 30 minutes after closing, Robin re-opens the question and less than a minute after that, posts a three-paragraph answer along with a code snippet.

It seems impossible to me that Robin managed to type this all up in less than a minute, and it seems like Robin used the fact that the question was closed to prevent others from answering.

This does not seem nice, yet it might not go against any rule we have here. What's the right way to handle this? Should it just be ignored, or should some action be taken to discourage this kind of behaviour?

Note: I do believe that at the time of closing, Robin believed the question was a duplicate.

A user, let's say "Chris", posted a question. Another user, let's say "Robin", with a gold badge in one of the tags, closed it as a duplicate. Chris edited the question to point out why closing it was wrong, it wasn't a duplicate.

Robin continues to interact with Chris in the comments, leaving the question closed. 30 minutes after closing, Robin re-opens the question and less than a minute after that, posts a three-paragraph answer along with a code snippet.

Robin couldn't have used SO's own answer functionality to prepare it as long as the question was closed, and it seems impossible to me that Robin managed to type this all up in less than a minute. The fact that it was closed prevented others from answering, and it would have been easier even for Robin to re-open it as soon as it was clear it was not a duplicate.

This does not seem nice, yet it might not go against any rule we have here. What's the right way to handle this? Should it just be ignored, or should some action be taken to discourage this kind of behaviour?

Note: I do believe that at the time of closing, Robin believed the question was a duplicate.

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user743382
user743382

Is it okay to leave a question wrongly dupehammered, type up an answer, and then re-open and post it?

A user, let's say "Chris", posted a question. Another user, let's say "Robin", with a gold badge in one of the tags, closed it as a duplicate. Chris edited the question to point out why closing it was wrong, it wasn't a duplicate.

Robin continues to interact with Chris in the comments, leaving the question closed. 30 minutes after closing, Robin re-opens the question and less than a minute after that, posts a three-paragraph answer along with a code snippet.

It seems impossible to me that Robin managed to type this all up in less than a minute, and it seems like Robin used the fact that the question was closed to prevent others from answering.

This does not seem nice, yet it might not go against any rule we have here. What's the right way to handle this? Should it just be ignored, or should some action be taken to discourage this kind of behaviour?

Note: I do believe that at the time of closing, Robin believed the question was a duplicate.