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Some (many) new users are impatient for an answer, especially if the assignment is due soon.

Whats the correct action when they repost the same question, perhaps reworking the text a little. The close as Dupe reason says "...and has an answer" which is often not the case. Same text is used in the prompt if you want to Flag it as a dupe.

I tried to search but most everything related to duplicates is the other kind of duplicate question (RegEx to parse HTML, NullReferenceException, etc).

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    Dupe the new one to the old one. Duping to a question by the same OP is exempt from the "must have an answer" rule. If they keep doing it they'll get themselves banned.
    – Mysticial
    Commented May 15, 2014 at 22:35
  • Thanks - there has been more of this lately (finals?). I take it, the system sees the same user ID on both questions to work towards a ban? Commented May 15, 2014 at 22:41
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    Yep, dupe it and downvote. (I've only run into one of these once in the past week, and hadn't seen any for months before that. But I don't go looking for them.)
    – Hot Licks
    Commented May 16, 2014 at 0:00
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    (I do, maybe once a month, run across two nearly identical "write my code for me" posts from (apparently) different users. I usually tell them to talk to their classmates.)
    – Hot Licks
    Commented May 16, 2014 at 0:01

2 Answers 2

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Questions that are duplicates should be close voted or flagged as such, no matter the circumstances.

Questions that are so obvious duplicates I often pair my close vote with a down vote for lack of research. I use that same line of reasoning for users posting the same question again because they failed to research why their first question didn't get answered. I have no problem when I find these kind of posts to head over to a chat room to verify if my duplicate vote is correct. The attention it gets might speed-up the close vote process.

When I'm in a good mood I leave a comment explaining that they should put effort in their original question, with a link to one of the many meta posts on the subject, for example this one: Reasking a question

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Not all cases can be flagged trivially as "new users are impatient for an answer". I recommend to use slightly more wisdom to distinguish each case.

Case 1: The original question was closed without any answer, AND the new question fixes the reason for the first close.

This seems totally fine: the first question was closed and there are very little chances to be reopen.

Generally speaking, creating a new question that duplicates a closed question (while fixing the reason it was closed) seems correct.

If the first question is re-open, only then we can close the worse of the two question & answer.

Case 2: The original question was closed without any answer, BUT the new question suffers from the same problem.

The same reason should apply to close the new question

Case 3: The original question is still open:

Close as duplicates.

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    "Generally speaking, creating a new question that duplicates a closed question (while fixing the reason it was closed) seems correct." I'm not sure why that seems correct to you. If a question is closed but fixable, it should be edited rather than asking a new question. Commented Jun 11 at 17:39
  • "Case 1: The original question was closed without any answer, AND the new question fixes the reason for the first close." Absolutely not. The OP is expected to edit the original question to apply the fix. That is in fact part of the specific purpose of closing a question: to prevent answers until the question is fixed. Commented Jun 12 at 9:23
  • Closed question stays closed forever without getting open, even when fixed. Just look the size of the queue of reopen. When reopen, it's usually weeks after, when the question has no value anymore. We have to be more pragmatic. Commented Jun 12 at 12:06
  • The purpose of the community is to provide Q&A, if a rule makes impossible to get answers to a valid question, then that rule is inherently wrong. Consequently, I disagree with your @KarlKnechtel: the purpose of closing a question is a moderation tool to keep a set of quality questions available; Avoiding answers is probably the least significant of the effects. Commented Jun 12 at 12:18
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    " if a rule makes impossible to get answers to a valid question, then that rule is inherently wrong" - Please read: Why should I help close "bad" questions that I think are valid, instead of helping the OP with an answer?. You are arguing against an extremely well established consensus, in a way that is simply ignorant of the actual effects of the tools (in particular, the fact that closed questions can be edited, and that the automated system feedback advises doing so). Commented Jun 12 at 12:31
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    "Closed question stays closed forever without getting open, even when fixed." Countless people have said variations on this. In almost every case, 90+% of what they think has been "fixed" is nowhere near fixed, and they demonstrate a serious misunderstanding of the question standards. It's fine to have a vision that differs from Stack Overflow's, and fine to want to use a site that doesn't work the way that Stack Overflow works. But that doesn't change how Stack Overflow actually does work, or why, or the value of it being thus. Commented Jun 12 at 12:33
  • @KarlKnechtel: you seem to wrongly assume that I don't understand or that I go against those principles, which is not the case. I personally seek high standard of Q&A. I guess perfectionism is also some philosophical topic. Back to the topic: a closed question is closed, and should not be considered for "duplicated questions". Because a guy wrote a bad question 10years ago and got closed, is not a reason to close all correctly written questions that somehow relates. Commented Jun 12 at 15:33
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    "Because a guy wrote a bad question 10years ago and got closed, is not a reason to close all correctly written questions that somehow relates." - Okay? That doesn't happen, and there's nothing about the system that would cause it to happen. If a new question meets standards and is not a duplicate, it can and will stay open even if there are existing bad questions that would be duplicates of it. There are even plenty of cases where an old low-quality question was ignored, a better version was asked, and the old question was later discovered and duped to the new one. Commented Jun 13 at 2:29
  • @KarlKnechtel: So we agree on this! You also acknoledge that anybody with sufficient permission could edit that old closed bad question, to meet quality and get reopen. Then, why should this same case not apply if the author of the 10years-old-bad-question is the same of the new question? For the sake of keeping a good and rich Q&A database, and a good community to mantain it; the name of the author should not make any difference on how we close, reopen and moderate questions. This is why I think that the current rule should be more nuanced than just "close those impatient guys" Commented Jun 13 at 5:51
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    @AdrianMaire you've put it across in case 1 such that it is allowed behaviour to repost a closed question if the asker believes they have resolved the closure reasons. That is not so. Yes, its likely that the community might not duplicate close if the closure reasons are actually resolved because doing so will just increase work for everyone. But this is not allowed and the asker should be flagged when doing so. Hence your "Generally speaking, creating a new question that duplicates a closed question (while fixing the reason it was closed) seems correct." is incorrect and misguiding. Commented Jun 13 at 6:06
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    "You also acknoledge that anybody with sufficient permission could edit that old closed bad question, to meet quality and get reopen." Not if there's already a suitable new question. Authorship is moot. At least, if it did get reopened, it should be closed again as a duplicate right away, so there's no point. Anyway, OP was very clearly and specifically talking about cases where there isn't a gap of years between the questions. Commented Jun 13 at 9:40
  • @AbdulAzizBarkat: Closing a question is not a way of sanction for bad behaviour. But a way of maintaining a rich and qualitative Q&A set. If a user abuses the system, he/she should be banned. We should also think about users that are interested in the answer, or that could be interested in providing a qualitative Answer. As you properly state, if the second version is of good quality, there is no reason to close it, and the older question could be set as duplicate. Commented Jun 13 at 17:36
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    @AdrianMaire "Closing a question is not a way of sanction for bad behaviour." and I never said that. My point is that the way you've stated case 1, you are sending a message: "Reposting questions are fine if you believe you have resolved the closure reason". On the contrary doing so is an abuse of the platform and should be flagged. Commented Jun 13 at 17:53
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    Linking duplicates that arise organically can help others to find a canonical and to answer more quickly, yes. But making your own self-duplicates is abusing the system, because it's inherently implying that your question is more important than those of others. Commented Jun 14 at 2:59
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    " If a question is not already asked, is exactly why you should not ask it again if in your first attempt you did a mistake and it was closed? " - in this example, at the time when you ask it again, it was already asked. By you. That's what we're talking about here. That's why you shouldn't ask it again: because you should edit the previous attempt instead of asking again. Because that's how the site is designed to work. You are specifically empowered to edit so that you can fix it, and the question closure specifically makes sure it isn't answered until then. Commented Jun 14 at 13:10

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