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The dupe hammer, used correctly and actively, is one way to naturally keep the site clean while still educating the people who inadvertently ask a duplicate question more than merely shutting down their Q.
Yet how do we strengthen it? How do we improve its chances of being used correctly, unambiguously, and more actively? This leads me to the thought: we need general redirection targets!
I see some beginners who are earnest but just so terribly naive. They cannot really be set on the right path through a mere answer of what's wrong with their basic code snippet. It's the wrong context for them to be educated. Yet at the heart of that faulty code snippet is the hidden general question, "How does recursion work?", e.g. I see that question there, disguised, and my thought is that it wouldn't be so bad if there was actually such a question on the site.
"General" often implies somewhat lazy and broad, like "How do I debug my C++ program?" -- no MCVE, just a one-liner question, and hopefully with answers that cover the basics of how to use GDB, MSVC debugger, XCode, etc.
Now we have the perfect redirection targets whenever someone asks a basic question about an error that could be spotted within 1 minute of debugging. Moreover it should be really great for both the site and the absolute beginner who posted that question to be redirected towards generality. We're giving them the "fishing rod", not "one fish" -- we're giving them the means to become self-sufficient.
Take two duplicate questions like, "Q: Why does my particle simulator crash?" and "Q: Why does creating a button in Qt segfault?" Behind the code snippets for both might be the underlying question, "Q: What happens when returning a pointer to a local object in a function?"
The problem with general questions is that they are often discouraged by the site. A question asking how to debug a C++ program or how recursion works would often get mercilessly shut down as too broad. But the questions are effectively there already, at least with the way I'm looking at it, just hidden within thousands and thousands of faulty code snippets. If they're explicitly there rather than disguised within a myriad of faulty code snippets, might that have a chance to help the situation?