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Jonathan Leffler
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I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from "providing multiple search terms for the same answer" (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.

  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.


What I'm trying to get across, is that - if I understand you correctly - you have arrived at an edge case where the guidelines are at conflict:

  • newer question can be answered with a near copy-paste from older question's answer = DUPLICATE!
  • newer question is not same as the old question but from diferrentdifferent perspective and or wording = NOT DUPLICATE

In such situations, I feel one should look at the purpose behind duplicates. I'm neither moderator nor reviewer, but as far as I understand it, duplicates are for:

  • the benefit of answerers - so they don't go mad from answering the same question with the same answer for Nth time, and leave frustrated

  • the benefit of visitors - so they get all relevant information in one single, interlinked glut, will arrive at what they're looking for - regardless of what perspective they have on the problem, and won't have to wade through N grains of sand to find that one pearl

  • the benefit of askers - so they get a slap on the wrist (so they will try better in the future) and luscious, ripe answers without waiting for them - at the same time

If you think marking this edge case as a duplicate is pertinent to these benefits...

... and won't make anyone scratch their head in bewilderment, like this one case where a question asking "Why is X false?" was marked as a duplicate of one with all answers saying "X is always true" ...

...you should probably do so.

I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from "providing multiple search terms for the same answer" (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.

  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.


What I'm trying to get across, is that - if I understand you correctly - you have arrived at an edge case where the guidelines are at conflict:

  • newer question can be answered with a near copy-paste from older question's answer = DUPLICATE!
  • newer question is not same as the old question but from diferrent perspective and or wording = NOT DUPLICATE

In such situations, I feel one should look at the purpose behind duplicates. I'm neither moderator nor reviewer, but as far as I understand it, duplicates are for:

  • the benefit of answerers - so they don't go mad from answering the same question with the same answer for Nth time, and leave frustrated

  • the benefit of visitors - so they get all relevant information in one single, interlinked glut, will arrive at what they're looking for - regardless of what perspective they have on the problem, and won't have to wade through N grains of sand to find that one pearl

  • the benefit of askers - so they get a slap on the wrist (so they will try better in the future) and luscious, ripe answers without waiting for them - at the same time

If you think marking this edge case as a duplicate is pertinent to these benefits...

... and won't make anyone scratch their head in bewilderment, like this one case where a question asking "Why is X false?" was marked as a duplicate of one with all answers saying "X is always true" ...

...you should probably do so.

I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from "providing multiple search terms for the same answer" (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.

  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.


What I'm trying to get across, is that - if I understand you correctly - you have arrived at an edge case where the guidelines are at conflict:

  • newer question can be answered with a near copy-paste from older question's answer = DUPLICATE!
  • newer question is not same as the old question but from different perspective and or wording = NOT DUPLICATE

In such situations, I feel one should look at the purpose behind duplicates. I'm neither moderator nor reviewer, but as far as I understand it, duplicates are for:

  • the benefit of answerers - so they don't go mad from answering the same question with the same answer for Nth time, and leave frustrated

  • the benefit of visitors - so they get all relevant information in one single, interlinked glut, will arrive at what they're looking for - regardless of what perspective they have on the problem, and won't have to wade through N grains of sand to find that one pearl

  • the benefit of askers - so they get a slap on the wrist (so they will try better in the future) and luscious, ripe answers without waiting for them - at the same time

If you think marking this edge case as a duplicate is pertinent to these benefits...

... and won't make anyone scratch their head in bewilderment, like this one case where a question asking "Why is X false?" was marked as a duplicate of one with all answers saying "X is always true" ...

...you should probably do so.

added reasoning behind my reasoning (meta - how appriopriate)
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Dragomok
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I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from "providing multiple search terms for the same answer" (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.

  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.


What I'm trying to get across, is that - if I understand you correctly - you have arrived at an edge case where the guidelines are at conflict:

  • newer question can be answered with a near copy-paste from older question's answer = DUPLICATE!
  • newer question is not same as the old question but from diferrent perspective and or wording = NOT DUPLICATE

In such situations, I feel one should look at the purpose behind duplicates. I'm neither moderator nor reviewer, but as far as I understand it, duplicates are for:

  • the benefit of answerers - so they don't go mad from answering the same question with the same answer for Nth time, and leave frustrated

  • the benefit of visitors - so they get all relevant information in one single, interlinked glut, will arrive at what they're looking for - regardless of what perspective they have on the problem, and won't have to wade through N grains of sand to find that one pearl

  • the benefit of askers - so they get a slap on the wrist (so they will try better in the future) and luscious, ripe answers without waiting for them - at the same time

If you think marking this edge case as a duplicate is pertinent to these benefits...

... and won't make anyone scratch their head in bewilderment, like this one case where a question asking "Why is X false?" was marked as a duplicate of one with all answers saying "X is always true" ...

...you should probably do so.

I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from "providing multiple search terms for the same answer" (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.

  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.

I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from "providing multiple search terms for the same answer" (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.

  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.


What I'm trying to get across, is that - if I understand you correctly - you have arrived at an edge case where the guidelines are at conflict:

  • newer question can be answered with a near copy-paste from older question's answer = DUPLICATE!
  • newer question is not same as the old question but from diferrent perspective and or wording = NOT DUPLICATE

In such situations, I feel one should look at the purpose behind duplicates. I'm neither moderator nor reviewer, but as far as I understand it, duplicates are for:

  • the benefit of answerers - so they don't go mad from answering the same question with the same answer for Nth time, and leave frustrated

  • the benefit of visitors - so they get all relevant information in one single, interlinked glut, will arrive at what they're looking for - regardless of what perspective they have on the problem, and won't have to wade through N grains of sand to find that one pearl

  • the benefit of askers - so they get a slap on the wrist (so they will try better in the future) and luscious, ripe answers without waiting for them - at the same time

If you think marking this edge case as a duplicate is pertinent to these benefits...

... and won't make anyone scratch their head in bewilderment, like this one case where a question asking "Why is X false?" was marked as a duplicate of one with all answers saying "X is always true" ...

...you should probably do so.

tried to improve my reasoning
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Dragomok
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  • 8
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I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

    If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

    Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from "providing multiple search terms for the same answer" (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.

  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

    Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

    something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.

I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.
  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.
  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.
  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.
  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.

I'm not an expert at advanced CSS selectors, but I think you might have answered your own dilemma by saying:

The fact that both selectors work so similarly is just a sheer coincidence owing to the nature of the language and directional attributes in HTML.

  • If it's a coincidence A works almost exactly like B, then it's not reasonable to expect for someone to think A works virtually exactly like B.

  • Therefore it's not reasonable to expect someone asking about A, to research B beforehand.

  • Therefore the question about A provides value for people who would research A in the future, since they wouldn't think about researching B either.

    This is different from "providing multiple search terms for the same answer" (ie. one of important reasons for the existence of duplicates), because it is not the same answer. You can arrive at duplicate's search terms by using thesaurus or playing with grammar - here not so much.

  • Therefore the question is not a duplicate.

  • something something duplication is in the subject matter not the question something something

Pointing out in the comments or the answer that answers to questions about A and B are coincidentally identical would still be a good idea, though.

Source Link
Dragomok
  • 622
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  • 13
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