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user5683823

The relationship between "questions" and "answers" is many-to-many. A question may have several distinct correct answers, but also an "answer" may be the correct answer to several distinct questions.

"Duplicate question" should refer to the question itself. Two distinct questions that have the same answer are not necessarily duplicate questions. Two questions are duplicates of each other if one can be transformed into the other through "standard manipulations" (however defined) REGARDLESS of any answer to either question.

Example: What is 3 + 5? What is 2 * 4? Both have the same answer, but they are not duplicates of each other. Compare with: What is 5 + 3? Addition is commutative, so this is a duplicate of the first question. I am able to ascertain that WITHOUT reference to the answer. What is 4 + 4? Well, that is the definition of 2 * 4, so this is a duplicate of the second question - again, NO reference to the answer.

Putting it another way: Two questions should be considered duplicates if it can be shown ahead of time, from basic principles, that they WILL have the same answer (that if one can be answered, then the other should be possible to answer similarly), even if no answer is known from the outset.

The relationship between "questions" and "answers" is many-to-many. A question may have several distinct correct answers, but also an "answer" may be the correct answer to several distinct questions.

"Duplicate question" should refer to the question itself. Two distinct questions that have the same answer are not necessarily duplicate questions. Two questions are duplicates of each other if one can be transformed into the other through "standard manipulations" (however defined) REGARDLESS of any answer to either question.

Example: What is 3 + 5? What is 2 * 4? Both have the same answer, but they are not duplicates of each other. Compare with: What is 5 + 3? Addition is commutative, so this is a duplicate of the first question. I am able to ascertain that WITHOUT reference to the answer. What is 4 + 4? Well, that is the definition of 2 * 4, so this is a duplicate of the second question - again, NO reference to the answer.

The relationship between "questions" and "answers" is many-to-many. A question may have several distinct correct answers, but also an "answer" may be the correct answer to several distinct questions.

"Duplicate question" should refer to the question itself. Two distinct questions that have the same answer are not necessarily duplicate questions. Two questions are duplicates of each other if one can be transformed into the other through "standard manipulations" (however defined) REGARDLESS of any answer to either question.

Example: What is 3 + 5? What is 2 * 4? Both have the same answer, but they are not duplicates of each other. Compare with: What is 5 + 3? Addition is commutative, so this is a duplicate of the first question. I am able to ascertain that WITHOUT reference to the answer. What is 4 + 4? Well, that is the definition of 2 * 4, so this is a duplicate of the second question - again, NO reference to the answer.

Putting it another way: Two questions should be considered duplicates if it can be shown ahead of time, from basic principles, that they WILL have the same answer (that if one can be answered, then the other should be possible to answer similarly), even if no answer is known from the outset.

Source Link
user5683823
user5683823

The relationship between "questions" and "answers" is many-to-many. A question may have several distinct correct answers, but also an "answer" may be the correct answer to several distinct questions.

"Duplicate question" should refer to the question itself. Two distinct questions that have the same answer are not necessarily duplicate questions. Two questions are duplicates of each other if one can be transformed into the other through "standard manipulations" (however defined) REGARDLESS of any answer to either question.

Example: What is 3 + 5? What is 2 * 4? Both have the same answer, but they are not duplicates of each other. Compare with: What is 5 + 3? Addition is commutative, so this is a duplicate of the first question. I am able to ascertain that WITHOUT reference to the answer. What is 4 + 4? Well, that is the definition of 2 * 4, so this is a duplicate of the second question - again, NO reference to the answer.