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How do I compare strings in Java? has been used as a duplicate for 1,428 questions. That probably indicates that it is a good canonical answer to a very common problem.

Now that I can close questions in one click, I would love to have a list of canonical Q&A based on how often they have been used as duplicate.

Is there a way to search the questions that are most often linked as duplicate?

Note: tagging as support for now - will become feature-request if not currently possible.

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  • Maybe try using Stack Exchange Data Explorer? Or how about the built-in advanced search? There's also the frequently linked tab.
    – user456814
    May 15, 2014 at 7:20
  • 1
    I wouldn't worry about old questions. Focus on newly-asked questions as a part of your normal interaction with the site, and close dupes as you encounter them. Jun 14, 2014 at 17:43
  • Is there any practical way to just ban questions that are obvious duplicates of "how to compare strings in java" from being posted in the first place?
    – Arc676
    Dec 23, 2015 at 4:21

1 Answer 1

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For the specific tag, click on the "Frequent" tab. I believe that the questions listed there are the ones that are most frequently linked to as duplicates.

This is probably not particularly canonical however. In order to do that, I think you need a special tag like for example (discussion about that tag here). A few other tags have similar FAQs.

Whether such specific FAQ tags are encouraged or discouraged, I don't know. But it seems like a good thing to have for the most popular topics. So it is probably up to the high rep users for a specific tag to band together and create a canonical FAQ.

As a side note, perhaps site support for a FAQ would be a nice thing to implement. What would be needed is essentially just a restricted tag that can only be used by people with a gold badge for the specific topic. It would be a feature related to the recent change where gold badge users can instantly close duplicates.

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