I have often found questions which are worded quite differently, but nevertheless boil down to a more general question.
For example, recently I found a question asking how to load a Qt widget plugin into an application. The author off-handedly mentions the plugin's Project is compiled as 32-bit while the application's Project is compiled as 64-bit.
Since this boils down to loading a 32-bit DLL into a 64-bit application, I marked it as duplicate of Load 32bit DLL library in 64bit application. The author however protested, saying his question is not like that at all.
While I understand where he's coming from, and I agree his question is not at all similar at first glance, it's mainly because the author himself might not have realised that Qt plugins are DLL files. After taking this (perhaps non-obvious) step, the connection becomes clear.
So my question is, how "exact" do the questions need to be? Can "Question X boils down to the more general question Y" be a sufficient reason to close as a duplicate?