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Michael Kay
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My first consideration is always to the person who asked the question. If I know the answer and can respond in 10 seconds, then it seems churlish not to do so.

It's true that in very many cases, such questions are duplicates. But often, it's not easy to identify an exact duplicate that contains an answer which the OP will recognize as an answer to their question. It might be evident, for example, that they don't have a sufficient grasp of the concepts or the terminology to understand the relevant answer. Or there might be 300 other people who asked the same question (or more likely, asked a different question that was equivalent, but they don't know enough to realise that), and finding one of those 300 that is going to help them is a substantial piece of effort. I don't have a week to refactor the SO knowledge base for such a topic; I do have 10 seconds to help the OP move forwards.

(In fact, yesterday I responded to this question: Element 'xxx' is invalid, misplaced, or occurs too often saying it was a duplicate and pointing to an accepted answer; the OP responded by saying they didn't understand the answer. When that happens, I don't feel I have responded well, even if the information I provided was technically accurate and in line with SO policies and guidelines.)

My first consideration is always to the person who asked the question. If I know the answer and can respond in 10 seconds, then it seems churlish not to do so.

It's true that in very many cases, such questions are duplicates. But often, it's not easy to identify an exact duplicate that contains an answer which the OP will recognize as an answer to their question. It might be evident, for example, that they don't have a sufficient grasp of the concepts or the terminology to understand the relevant answer. Or there might be 300 other people who asked the same question (or more likely, asked a different question that was equivalent, but they don't know enough to realise that), and finding one of those 300 that is going to help them is a substantial piece of effort. I don't have a week to refactor the SO knowledge base for such a topic; I do have 10 seconds to help the OP move forwards.

My first consideration is always to the person who asked the question. If I know the answer and can respond in 10 seconds, then it seems churlish not to do so.

It's true that in very many cases, such questions are duplicates. But often, it's not easy to identify an exact duplicate that contains an answer which the OP will recognize as an answer to their question. It might be evident, for example, that they don't have a sufficient grasp of the concepts or the terminology to understand the relevant answer. Or there might be 300 other people who asked the same question (or more likely, asked a different question that was equivalent, but they don't know enough to realise that), and finding one of those 300 that is going to help them is a substantial piece of effort. I don't have a week to refactor the SO knowledge base for such a topic; I do have 10 seconds to help the OP move forwards.

(In fact, yesterday I responded to this question: Element 'xxx' is invalid, misplaced, or occurs too often saying it was a duplicate and pointing to an accepted answer; the OP responded by saying they didn't understand the answer. When that happens, I don't feel I have responded well, even if the information I provided was technically accurate and in line with SO policies and guidelines.)

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Michael Kay
  • 162.9k
  • 1
  • 21
  • 21

My first consideration is always to the person who asked the question. If I know the answer and can respond in 10 seconds, then it seems churlish not to do so.

It's true that in very many cases, such questions are duplicates. But often, it's not easy to identify an exact duplicate that contains an answer which the OP will recognize as an answer to their question. It might be evident, for example, that they don't have a sufficient grasp of the concepts or the terminology to understand the relevant answer. Or there might be 300 other people who asked the same question (or more likely, asked a different question that was equivalent, but they don't know enough to realise that), and finding one of those 300 that is going to help them is a substantial piece of effort. I don't have a week to refactor the SO knowledge base for such a topic; I do have 10 seconds to help the OP move forwards.