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  1. The questions aren't unrelated. The questions are exact duplicates. The solution to your problem is the entirety of the answer, not just some section of it. People with that one problem should be reading the answer, and when they do, they'll have the solution to their problem.

  2. It was a duplicate before any edits were made. Your question is asking the exact same thing as the marked duplicate. You posted a comment in which you stated that the existing solution didn't work for you, for reasons not even mentioned in the question. This prompted the author of the answer to realize that their answer to that one question, asked by both of you, was incomplete and was missing some important information in order to be a good answer to that one question. So they edited their question in response to your comment pointing out how the answer could be improved, to address that problem.

    Had they not performed the edit that they did in response to your comment (assuming you had edited that additional information on your problem into the question) it would have been grounds for reopening the question, as you'd have identified how the answer to the duplicate question failed to work for you, but since the edit has taken place, the duplicate no longer fails to answer your question, so that's not necessary.

Had they not performed the edit that they did in response to your comment (assuming you had edited that additional information on your problem into the question) it would have been grounds for reopening the question, as you'd have identified how the answer to the duplicate question failed to work for you, but since the edit has taken place, the duplicate no longer fails to answer your question, so that's not necessary.

  1. The questions aren't unrelated. The questions are exact duplicates. The solution to your problem is the entirety of the answer, not just some section of it. People with that one problem should be reading the answer, and when they do, they'll have the solution to their problem.

  2. It was a duplicate before any edits were made. Your question is asking the exact same thing as the marked duplicate. You posted a comment in which you stated that the existing solution didn't work for you, for reasons not even mentioned in the question. This prompted the author of the answer to realize that their answer to that one question, asked by both of you, was incomplete and was missing some important information in order to be a good answer to that one question. So they edited their question in response to your comment pointing out how the answer could be improved, to address that problem.

Had they not performed the edit that they did in response to your comment (assuming you had edited that additional information on your problem into the question) it would have been grounds for reopening the question, as you'd have identified how the answer to the duplicate question failed to work for you, but since the edit has taken place, the duplicate no longer fails to answer your question, so that's not necessary.

  1. The questions aren't unrelated. The questions are exact duplicates. The solution to your problem is the entirety of the answer, not just some section of it. People with that one problem should be reading the answer, and when they do, they'll have the solution to their problem.

  2. It was a duplicate before any edits were made. Your question is asking the exact same thing as the marked duplicate. You posted a comment in which you stated that the existing solution didn't work for you, for reasons not even mentioned in the question. This prompted the author of the answer to realize that their answer to that one question, asked by both of you, was incomplete and was missing some important information in order to be a good answer to that one question. So they edited their question in response to your comment pointing out how the answer could be improved, to address that problem.

    Had they not performed the edit that they did in response to your comment (assuming you had edited that additional information on your problem into the question) it would have been grounds for reopening the question, as you'd have identified how the answer to the duplicate question failed to work for you, but since the edit has taken place, the duplicate no longer fails to answer your question, so that's not necessary.

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Servy
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  1. The questions aren't unrelated. The questions are exact duplicates. The solution to your problem is the entirety of the answer, not just some section of it. People with that one problem should be reading the answer, and when they do, they'll have the solution to their problem.

  2. It was a duplicate before any edits were made. Your question is asking the exact same thing as the marked duplicate. You posted a comment in which you stated that the existing solution didn't work for you, for reasons not even mentioned in the question. This prompted the author of the answer to realize that their answer to that one question, asked by both of you, was incomplete and was missing some important information in order to be a good answer to that one question. So they edited their question in response to your comment pointing out how the answer could be improved, to address that problem.

Had they not performed the edit that they did thenin response to your comment (assuming you had edited inthat additional information on your problem into the question) it would have been grounds for reopening the question, as you'd have identified how the answer to the duplicate question failed to work for you, but since the edit has taken place, the duplicate no longer fails to answer your question, so that's not necessary.

  1. The questions aren't unrelated. The questions are exact duplicates. The solution to your problem is the entirety of the answer, not just some section of it. People with that one problem should be reading the answer, and when they do, they'll have the solution to their problem.

  2. It was a duplicate before any edits were made. Your question is asking the exact same thing as the marked duplicate. You posted a comment in which you stated that the existing solution didn't work for you, for reasons not even mentioned in the question. This prompted the author of the answer to realize that their answer to that one question, asked by both of you, was incomplete and was missing some important information in order to be a good answer to that one question. So they edited their question in response to your comment pointing out how the answer could be improved, to address that problem.

Had they not performed the edit that they did then your comment (assuming you had edited in the question) would have been grounds for reopening the question, as you'd have identified how the answer to the duplicate question failed to work for you, but since the edit has taken place, the duplicate no longer fails to answer your question, so that's not necessary.

  1. The questions aren't unrelated. The questions are exact duplicates. The solution to your problem is the entirety of the answer, not just some section of it. People with that one problem should be reading the answer, and when they do, they'll have the solution to their problem.

  2. It was a duplicate before any edits were made. Your question is asking the exact same thing as the marked duplicate. You posted a comment in which you stated that the existing solution didn't work for you, for reasons not even mentioned in the question. This prompted the author of the answer to realize that their answer to that one question, asked by both of you, was incomplete and was missing some important information in order to be a good answer to that one question. So they edited their question in response to your comment pointing out how the answer could be improved, to address that problem.

Had they not performed the edit that they did in response to your comment (assuming you had edited that additional information on your problem into the question) it would have been grounds for reopening the question, as you'd have identified how the answer to the duplicate question failed to work for you, but since the edit has taken place, the duplicate no longer fails to answer your question, so that's not necessary.

Source Link
Servy
  • 203.7k
  • 105
  • 683
  • 806

  1. The questions aren't unrelated. The questions are exact duplicates. The solution to your problem is the entirety of the answer, not just some section of it. People with that one problem should be reading the answer, and when they do, they'll have the solution to their problem.

  2. It was a duplicate before any edits were made. Your question is asking the exact same thing as the marked duplicate. You posted a comment in which you stated that the existing solution didn't work for you, for reasons not even mentioned in the question. This prompted the author of the answer to realize that their answer to that one question, asked by both of you, was incomplete and was missing some important information in order to be a good answer to that one question. So they edited their question in response to your comment pointing out how the answer could be improved, to address that problem.

Had they not performed the edit that they did then your comment (assuming you had edited in the question) would have been grounds for reopening the question, as you'd have identified how the answer to the duplicate question failed to work for you, but since the edit has taken place, the duplicate no longer fails to answer your question, so that's not necessary.