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Added as a prerequisite that the questions should be closely related, to prevent paradoxical situations where two completely unrelated questions would satisfy the criterion of being served by the same answer (for example an answer that contains an off-topic side-note).
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Duplicate questions are defined as questions that have already been answered on this site. All closures should follow an apples-to-apples comparison. In other words, if the question matches exactly to one that has been previously asked, or if the question is closely related and there is an answer that would serve both questions, that question should be marked as a [Duplicate] and linked to the canonical.

Duplicate questions are defined as questions that have already been answered on this site. All closures should follow an apples-to-apples comparison. In other words, if the question matches exactly to one that has been previously asked, or there is an answer that would serve both questions, that question should be marked as a [Duplicate] and linked to the canonical.

Duplicate questions are defined as questions that have already been answered on this site. All closures should follow an apples-to-apples comparison. In other words, if the question matches exactly to one that has been previously asked, or if the question is closely related and there is an answer that would serve both questions, that question should be marked as a [Duplicate] and linked to the canonical.

deleted 6 characters in body
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Robert Harvey
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“This question has already been asked, and answered.”

If the ‘fundamental goal’ is to create a roadmap to the canonical answer, we must first make sure that duplicates are actually that: questions that have“This question has already been asked, and answered before on Stack Overflow.

If the ‘fundamental goal’ is to create a roadmap to the canonical answer, we must first make sure that duplicates are actually that: questions that have been asked and answered before on Stack Overflow.

“This question has already been asked, and answered.”

If the ‘fundamental goal’ is to create a roadmap to the canonical answer, we must first make sure that duplicates are actually that: questions that have been asked and answered before on Stack Overflow.

“This question has already been asked, and answered.

If the ‘fundamental goal’ is to create a roadmap to the canonical answer, we must first make sure that duplicates are actually that: questions that have been asked and answered before on Stack Overflow.

removed unnecessary verbosity - we do not want the guidance to be a wall of text nobody reads
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0Valt
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First, review all the answers on the duplicate target or targets. Do they solve your problem?

Yes, the duplicate(s) solve my problem

Great! You don't need to do anything further with your existing question. Your problem has been solved, your question will divert future readers to a place where they will also find an answer, and the duplicate system is working exactly as it's supposed to.

No, the duplicate(s) do not solve my problem

If this is the case, your goal should become differentiating your question from the marked duplicate so that it can be reopened and answered.

Now that the question is closed, the burden has shifted from "Why are these questions considered duplicates" to "How can I prove that these questions are not duplicates?", and it's your job to make the distinction clear.

  • Review all the answers on the duplicate target or targets. Do they solve your problem?

    • Yes, the duplicate(s) solve my problem

      You don't need to do anything. The question now serves as a signpost to future readers with the same problem.

    • No, the duplicate(s) do not solve my problem

      If this is the case, your goal should become differentiating your question from the marked duplicate so that it can be reopened and answered.

    Now the burden has shifted from "Why are these questions considered duplicates?" to "How can I prove that these questions are not duplicates?", and it's your job to make the distinction clear.

  • Try editing your question.

    • It won’t help to add comments to your question or to ask the same question a second time. The ONLY way to get your question answered is to edit it with more details and get it reopened.

      • Reposting your question will likely result in a duplicate closure against your previous question.
    • Click the “edit” link below your question.

    • Make sure that the title of your question is substantially different from the title of the marked duplicate.

    • Describe your problem better, including an explanation of how your problem differs from the marked duplicate.

    • Explain why the answers to the linked duplicate do not solve your problem.

    • Make sure your code matches the question that is being asked.

    • Make sure the question is properly tagged.

  • Avoid edits that:

    • Call out specific users for closing the question.

      • Those users will not be notified and it is generally unproductive as it takes away focus from the actual question.
  • Check the "This edit resolves the original close reason and the question should be considered for reopening" checkbox and save your edit. This causes your question to enter the reopen queue where it will be reviewed.

  • The review process can take between several hours and days. You may be able to speed up the process by inviting specific people to review your question for reopening.

    • You can ping anybody that commented on your question by mentioning their name in the comments with an @ symbol in front of it. See How do @-mentions work for an in-depth explanation.

      Ex: “@Jeff I updated the question because it shouldn’t be marked as a duplicate. Can you take a look at it?”

      If your question was closed by a single person, you can also ping that person, however, if your question was closed by a group of people, ping doesn’t work for those individuals.

First, review all the answers on the duplicate target or targets. Do they solve your problem?

Yes, the duplicate(s) solve my problem

Great! You don't need to do anything further with your existing question. Your problem has been solved, your question will divert future readers to a place where they will also find an answer, and the duplicate system is working exactly as it's supposed to.

No, the duplicate(s) do not solve my problem

If this is the case, your goal should become differentiating your question from the marked duplicate so that it can be reopened and answered.

Now that the question is closed, the burden has shifted from "Why are these questions considered duplicates" to "How can I prove that these questions are not duplicates?", and it's your job to make the distinction clear.

  • Try editing your question.

    • It won’t help to add comments to your question or to ask the same question a second time. The ONLY way to get your question answered is to edit it with more details and get it reopened.

      • Reposting your question will likely result in a duplicate closure against your previous question.
    • Click the “edit” link below your question.

    • Make sure that the title of your question is substantially different from the title of the marked duplicate.

    • Describe your problem better, including an explanation of how your problem differs from the marked duplicate.

    • Explain why the answers to the linked duplicate do not solve your problem.

    • Make sure your code matches the question that is being asked.

    • Make sure the question is properly tagged.

  • Avoid edits that:

    • Call out specific users for closing the question.

      • Those users will not be notified and it is generally unproductive as it takes away focus from the actual question.
  • Check the "This edit resolves the original close reason and the question should be considered for reopening" checkbox and save your edit. This causes your question to enter the reopen queue where it will be reviewed.

  • The review process can take between several hours and days. You may be able to speed up the process by inviting specific people to review your question for reopening.

    • You can ping anybody that commented on your question by mentioning their name in the comments with an @ symbol in front of it. See How do @-mentions work for an in-depth explanation.

      Ex: “@Jeff I updated the question because it shouldn’t be marked as a duplicate. Can you take a look at it?”

      If your question was closed by a single person, you can also ping that person, however, if your question was closed by a group of people, ping doesn’t work for those individuals.

  • Review all the answers on the duplicate target or targets. Do they solve your problem?

    • Yes, the duplicate(s) solve my problem

      You don't need to do anything. The question now serves as a signpost to future readers with the same problem.

    • No, the duplicate(s) do not solve my problem

      If this is the case, your goal should become differentiating your question from the marked duplicate so that it can be reopened and answered.

    Now the burden has shifted from "Why are these questions considered duplicates?" to "How can I prove that these questions are not duplicates?", and it's your job to make the distinction clear.

  • Try editing your question.

    • It won’t help to add comments to your question or to ask the same question a second time. The ONLY way to get your question answered is to edit it with more details and get it reopened.

      • Reposting your question will likely result in a duplicate closure against your previous question.
    • Click the “edit” link below your question.

    • Make sure that the title of your question is substantially different from the title of the marked duplicate.

    • Describe your problem better, including an explanation of how your problem differs from the marked duplicate.

    • Explain why the answers to the linked duplicate do not solve your problem.

    • Make sure your code matches the question that is being asked.

    • Make sure the question is properly tagged.

  • Avoid edits that:

    • Call out specific users for closing the question.

      • Those users will not be notified and it is generally unproductive as it takes away focus from the actual question.
  • Check the "This edit resolves the original close reason and the question should be considered for reopening" checkbox and save your edit. This causes your question to enter the reopen queue where it will be reviewed.

  • The review process can take between several hours and days. You may be able to speed up the process by inviting specific people to review your question for reopening.

    • You can ping anybody that commented on your question by mentioning their name in the comments with an @ symbol in front of it. See How do @-mentions work for an in-depth explanation.

      Ex: “@Jeff I updated the question because it shouldn’t be marked as a duplicate. Can you take a look at it?”

      If your question was closed by a single person, you can also ping that person, however, if your question was closed by a group of people, ping doesn’t work for those individuals.

Restructure the "my question is closed" section bullets to make a little more sense; add guidance for when the duplicate *does* answer the question
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zcoop98
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Rollback to Revision 4
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user5349916
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Removed the answer part. We close questions against other questions, whenever they have answers or not is not necessary to identify them
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Braiam
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Readability; every list item starts with a verb
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Adriaan
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Active reading [<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_clause_structure#Run-on_sentences>].
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Peter Mortensen
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added 40 characters in body
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Cesar M StaffMod
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