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Tom
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I'm not quite sure if there is a specific rule here, but I have a rule of thumb: flag/vote with the post that provides the clearest answer and avoid distracting information.
  
In your example, which I initially voted to close, I chose the already closed question, because it points you to the other (canonical?) post, but also contains an answer which might be helpful as well. So, I thought that the additional answer helps to provide additional insight.

There can also be the case, where someone asks about problem A which fails due to problem B. But problem B is hard to discover if you don't have deeper knowledge about the topic. If there is then another question, which asks about A and its answer explains why it is caused by problem B (additionally with the link to the final dupe target about problem B), then I would use that question as kind of a "bridge" or "gateway" and use that as the dupe target.
An example for that is this question: Validating input using java.util.Scanner. Although the linked duplicate might already answer the question I've voted to close, I really like the top voted answer to provide additional information and examples on how to validate user input. So choosing this question provides the best information (in my opinion) in this context.

To sum it up: choose the post which answers the question best (mostly the final dupe target), but feel free to chose an "intermediate question" when it provides additional information or context. And if you have access to the proper moderation tools, like a gold badge, then feel free to add multiple post to the list of duplicate questions.

I'm not quite sure if there is a specific rule here, but I have a rule of thumb: flag/vote with the post that provides the clearest answer and avoid distracting information.
  In your example, which I initially voted to close, I chose the already closed question, because it points you to the other (canonical?) post, but also contains an answer which might be helpful as well. So, I thought that the additional answer helps to provide additional insight.

There can also be the case, where someone asks about problem A which fails due to problem B. But problem B is hard to discover if you don't have deeper knowledge about the topic. If there is then another question, which asks about A and its answer explains why it is caused by problem B (additionally with the link to the final dupe target about problem B), then I would use that question as kind of a "bridge" or "gateway" and use that as the dupe target.

To sum it up: choose the post which answers the question best (mostly the final dupe target), but feel free to chose an "intermediate question" when it provides additional information or context. And if you have access to the proper moderation tools, like a gold badge, then feel free to add multiple post to the list of duplicate questions.

I'm not quite sure if there is a specific rule here, but I have a rule of thumb: flag/vote with the post that provides the clearest answer and avoid distracting information. 
In your example, which I initially voted to close, I chose the already closed question, because it points you to the other (canonical?) post, but also contains an answer which might be helpful as well. So, I thought that the additional answer helps to provide additional insight.

There can also be the case, where someone asks about problem A which fails due to problem B. But problem B is hard to discover if you don't have deeper knowledge about the topic. If there is then another question, which asks about A and its answer explains why it is caused by problem B (additionally with the link to the final dupe target about problem B), then I would use that question as kind of a "bridge" or "gateway" and use that as the dupe target.
An example for that is this question: Validating input using java.util.Scanner. Although the linked duplicate might already answer the question I've voted to close, I really like the top voted answer to provide additional information and examples on how to validate user input. So choosing this question provides the best information (in my opinion) in this context.

To sum it up: choose the post which answers the question best (mostly the final dupe target), but feel free to chose an "intermediate question" when it provides additional information or context. And if you have access to the proper moderation tools, like a gold badge, then feel free to add multiple post to the list of duplicate questions.

Source Link
Tom
  • 17.5k
  • 2
  • 17
  • 22

I'm not quite sure if there is a specific rule here, but I have a rule of thumb: flag/vote with the post that provides the clearest answer and avoid distracting information.
In your example, which I initially voted to close, I chose the already closed question, because it points you to the other (canonical?) post, but also contains an answer which might be helpful as well. So, I thought that the additional answer helps to provide additional insight.

There can also be the case, where someone asks about problem A which fails due to problem B. But problem B is hard to discover if you don't have deeper knowledge about the topic. If there is then another question, which asks about A and its answer explains why it is caused by problem B (additionally with the link to the final dupe target about problem B), then I would use that question as kind of a "bridge" or "gateway" and use that as the dupe target.

To sum it up: choose the post which answers the question best (mostly the final dupe target), but feel free to chose an "intermediate question" when it provides additional information or context. And if you have access to the proper moderation tools, like a gold badge, then feel free to add multiple post to the list of duplicate questions.