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Add: Link1: Chances of reopening being lamented by other users; Link2: Quote prejudice experience by another member
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TheMaster
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Should I keep reposting my question until I receive the answer I want?

No. Once might go unnoticed. Reposting the same question over and over to users who don't want to answer is not in your best interests.

What should I do to the previous question? Delete it?

Depends. How much reputation do you currently have? How many questions have you asked so far? How much are you willing to risk to get a answer to this question? Is a answer to this question that important to risk getting you question-banned? Do you want to keep adding questions here? If you have good reputation plus a couple of good questions(questions with a score >= 1) under your belt, the risk is low.

If I ask a new question should I change something so that I have more chances of getting it answered instead of being closed with the same duplicate target?

You should definitely

  • read the duplicate question(s) and all it's answers(not just the accepted one) and test each of them. Although the question might be different, any of the answers might work for your question. Maybe that's why it was considered a duplicate by the closers.

If you still believe "None of the answers" in the linked question answer your particular question,

  • quote the duplicate question with it's link
  • clearly explain why each of the answers(at least 2 to 3) won't/didn't work for your question

My personal suggestions:

My personal suggestions:

Although the previous answers might recommend editing your original question, it is very rare for a question to be reopened after being closed. Even if the question is completely different and you edit to make it clearEven if the question is completely different and you edit to make it clear, chances of getting your question reopened is really low. Overall, chancesIt's around 2% in case of getting yourduplicates after question reopened is really low. editingOverall, It's around 2% in case of duplicates after question editingstats. 

Deleting and reasking after good research is the best way to go as far as getting a answer is concerned. It gives your question better exposure as well. Although you need to strive to make your new question clear and prove without doubt that it's not a duplicate, Some users comprehend better than others(question, question quality being the same). In other cases, there are burnt out users tired of seeing same questions over and over again, who might already be prejudiced.

If you only review queue, you start to see only that, what is worse on StackOverflow. Every question is a potential candidate for close or downvote. Every asker a help vampire. It makes you burn out. I've also noticed that constant reviewing makes me more aggresive when it comes to downvoting and closing
- Danubianlink

So, I think it's better to post a new question at(at a different time of day or different day of week(weekends or weekdays) to avoid the same set of reviewers).

Should I keep reposting my question until I receive the answer I want?

No. Once might go unnoticed. Reposting the same question over and over to users who don't want to answer is not in your best interests.

What should I do to the previous question? Delete it?

Depends. How much reputation do you currently have? How many questions have you asked so far? How much are you willing to risk to get a answer to this question? Is a answer to this question that important to risk getting you question-banned? Do you want to keep adding questions here? If you have good reputation plus a couple of good questions(questions with a score >= 1) under your belt, the risk is low.

If I ask a new question should I change something so that I have more chances of getting it answered instead of being closed with the same duplicate target?

You should definitely

  • read the duplicate question(s) and all it's answers(not just the accepted one) and test each of them. Although the question might be different, any of the answers might work for your question. Maybe that's why it was considered a duplicate by the closers.

If you still believe "None of the answers" in the linked question answer your particular question,

  • quote the duplicate question with it's link
  • clearly explain why each of the answers(at least 2 to 3) won't/didn't work for your question

My personal suggestions:

Although the previous answers might recommend editing your original question, it is very rare for a question to be reopened after being closed. Even if the question is completely different and you edit to make it clear, chances of getting your question reopened is really low. Overall, It's around 2% in case of duplicates after question editing. Deleting and reasking after good research is the best way to go as far as getting a answer is concerned. It gives your question better exposure as well. Although you need to strive to make your new question clear and prove without doubt that it's not a duplicate, Some users comprehend better than others(question quality being the same). In other cases, there are burnt out users tired of seeing same questions over and over again, who might already be prejudiced. So, I think it's better to post a new question at a different time of day or different day of week(weekends or weekdays) to avoid the same set of reviewers.

Should I keep reposting my question until I receive the answer I want?

No. Once might go unnoticed. Reposting the same question over and over to users who don't want to answer is not in your best interests.

What should I do to the previous question? Delete it?

Depends. How much reputation do you currently have? How many questions have you asked so far? How much are you willing to risk to get a answer to this question? Is a answer to this question that important to risk getting you question-banned? Do you want to keep adding questions here? If you have good reputation plus a couple of good questions(questions with a score >= 1) under your belt, the risk is low.

If I ask a new question should I change something so that I have more chances of getting it answered instead of being closed with the same duplicate target?

You should definitely

  • read the duplicate question(s) and all it's answers(not just the accepted one) and test each of them. Although the question might be different, any of the answers might work for your question. Maybe that's why it was considered a duplicate by the closers.

If you still believe "None of the answers" in the linked question answer your particular question,

  • quote the duplicate question with it's link
  • clearly explain why each of the answers(at least 2 to 3) won't/didn't work for your question

My personal suggestions:

Although the previous answers might recommend editing your original question, it is very rare for a question to be reopened after being closed. Even if the question is completely different and you edit to make it clear, chances of getting your question reopened is really low. Overall, It's around 2% in case of duplicates after question editingstats. 

Deleting and reasking after good research is the best way to go as far as getting a answer is concerned. It gives your question better exposure as well. Although you need to strive to make your new question clear and prove without doubt that it's not a duplicate, Some users comprehend better than others, question quality being the same. In other cases, there are burnt out users tired of seeing same questions over and over again, who might already be prejudiced.

If you only review queue, you start to see only that, what is worse on StackOverflow. Every question is a potential candidate for close or downvote. Every asker a help vampire. It makes you burn out. I've also noticed that constant reviewing makes me more aggresive when it comes to downvoting and closing
- Danubianlink

So, I think it's better to post a new question (at a different time of day or different day of week(weekends or weekdays) to avoid the same set of reviewers).

Source Link
TheMaster
  • 50.2k
  • 2
  • 27
  • 54

Should I keep reposting my question until I receive the answer I want?

No. Once might go unnoticed. Reposting the same question over and over to users who don't want to answer is not in your best interests.

What should I do to the previous question? Delete it?

Depends. How much reputation do you currently have? How many questions have you asked so far? How much are you willing to risk to get a answer to this question? Is a answer to this question that important to risk getting you question-banned? Do you want to keep adding questions here? If you have good reputation plus a couple of good questions(questions with a score >= 1) under your belt, the risk is low.

If I ask a new question should I change something so that I have more chances of getting it answered instead of being closed with the same duplicate target?

You should definitely

  • read the duplicate question(s) and all it's answers(not just the accepted one) and test each of them. Although the question might be different, any of the answers might work for your question. Maybe that's why it was considered a duplicate by the closers.

If you still believe "None of the answers" in the linked question answer your particular question,

  • quote the duplicate question with it's link
  • clearly explain why each of the answers(at least 2 to 3) won't/didn't work for your question

My personal suggestions:

Although the previous answers might recommend editing your original question, it is very rare for a question to be reopened after being closed. Even if the question is completely different and you edit to make it clear, chances of getting your question reopened is really low. Overall, It's around 2% in case of duplicates after question editing. Deleting and reasking after good research is the best way to go as far as getting a answer is concerned. It gives your question better exposure as well. Although you need to strive to make your new question clear and prove without doubt that it's not a duplicate, Some users comprehend better than others(question quality being the same). In other cases, there are burnt out users tired of seeing same questions over and over again, who might already be prejudiced. So, I think it's better to post a new question at a different time of day or different day of week(weekends or weekdays) to avoid the same set of reviewers.