Last week, I finally found something to ask on Stack Overflow! I kept track of my research and knocked out a bare-bones replication of the problem. I typed out the question and pasted it into the Ask Question form.
All those "Questions that may already have [my] answer" popped up, and I checked them out, too. Nope. Nope, already saw that one. Nope, saw that. Ooh, let me try that...nope. And so on.
Then I got to the end of the list (no kidding, it was the last item): a question I hadn't seen before, because it didn't contain any of the keywords that I had thought of for my problem. The setup wasn't the same at all in the broad strokes, but there was one strong connection, so I tried out the answer, while thinking that it could never work: it should be equivalent to a line of code that I already included. But, it worked!
I never found this other question because there was almost no verbal overlap despite there being a core equivalence. I now find myself inclined, equipped with Mjölnir, to perform a variation on self-answering in which I post my sincere and painstakingly-researched question, then immediately close it as a duplicate of the question where I found the solution.* I think this would widen the search target for the problem/solution in a way that would be beneficial. You know, the whole justification for duplicate closure in the first place.
What do you think of this? Does "answer your own question" extend to "plant your own signpost"? Or is it an abuse of my dupehammer, swinging my rep around? Am I just too emotionally attached to my already-written question?
(https://stackoverflow.com/questions/33027804/in-custom-modal-presentation-uitransitionview-ignores-auto-layout-constraints is the subject post.)
Closely related, but I haven't posted, let alone gotten an answer yet: I want to, and do not want to, close my question as a duplicate
Also: Delete question or close own post as duplicate?
Related, but I'm not re-posting about the same situation (also doesn't include the dupehammer angle): Is it okay to intentionally duplicate a question if you think you can ask it better?
Related, but in the opposite direction: I posted a canonical Q&A to a problem I solved, but now it's marked as duplicate to an older question with an incomplete solution
Not related because in it, the original does not solve the problem: What to do when the question you want to ask is a duplicate?
*The target question is a good post, too, so I'd never think of closing it as a duplicate of mine.
YES
for this situation. The solution is completely straightforward and transparently applicable to my post.