I stumbled upon question A which was marked as a duplicate of question B. I see several issues with this:
- A is (in my view) well phrased question of occasional user who is kept on low level privileges due to reputation.
- B is just (in my view) too general question asked probably out of curiosity, the author didn't even specified what does he have on mind.
It might be better if A is not closed and B is closed as too broad with links to particular subcategories.
Today, questions like B gets more and more attention and their authors gets more and more reputation for no effort and in vain because they often don't know what to do with it. New authors of questions like A are often enthusiastic and active, but they gets leeched by questions B, their priviledges stay low and they can not participate more.
In my case (17k) I am more or less inactive since cca 5k rep, I have different interests already, I don't use my time to bother with reviews and I don't even know about new features, yet my priviledges grows at the expense of new users and this is just unfair and counterproductive.
Update
OK, we managed to close the bad question B for obvious reasons:
- I have witnessed some very strange behaviour... - unclear which behaviour
- How does this work and when should it be used? - too broad
Now let's reopen the A. I rephrased its title to make the point clearer. How can the user find his answer to his perfectly valid question by redirecting to B? Accepted answer quoting EcmaScript this keyword, setTimeout example, entering eval code... nothing related. Scroll down... okay, the next one answers it in parts 2 + 3, but it is bloated, focusing on the broad question B. Just pointing at the difference between scope and context with a short code snippet would be enough for the question A. Answering to B that way would be incomplete in question B's context, so how the A can get its answer?
The point
I'd like not to close questions as duplicates pointing to vague broad questions with broad answers. I'd like to appreciate low rated users asking sincere well-phrased questions. If a new question is put better than similar older question, I'd like the new question roll over the old question somehow (instead of marking it as a duplicate of the older question).
this
keyword on it's own? The reason why we have such canonical duplicates is that these questions get ask all the time. Pointing them to a good answer about it seems to be a good idea.this
behavior in nested functions (perharps the title should be rephrased), B is just sheer bad, note the I have witnessed some very strange behaviour with it... - which behaviour? Unclear, broad - close this sh*t.