I've left a couple of comments on a question, in which the person asking the question states:
I'm aware that this is a fairly common question but it seems like the answer is always to include a hard-coded height. I would like to avoid this because while that was a perfectly fine solution for the desktop styling this is intended to be displayed on mobile devices and as such I'd like it to be a bit more responsive than a hard-coded height.
This, to my mind, demonstrates an attempt (however cursory) at finding existing duplicates, but finding them inapplicable to the stated problem raised in the question itself.
The following conversation was raised in the comments to that question, between another user (who remains anonymous because this isn't a witch-hunt), myself and the OP of the question (note that there are other comments interspersed, but excised for brevity):
This is a duplicate of so many questions. - UserOne
@UserOne you're right, the question is probably amongst the most common on Stack Overflow but I couldn't find one that worked for my situation (no hard-coded height). I'd be thrilled with a link to an answered question that does, though! =) - OP
@UserOne: so vote to close as such.1 - Me
When you're asking a question you should search for duplicates, not rely on others to do so. – UserOne
...
@UserOne Not to repeat myself but I did. I could not find any that replicated this question even though there are hordes that bear superficial similarities. You clearly feel it's a duplicate, however, so I was asking you to post a link to one – that way we could have this question removed for being redundant or have a permanent link for folks such as myself that couldn't find it. – OP
@UserOne: as the person that stated that this "is a duplicate of so many questions" the onus is on you to find a duplicate, and vote to close as such, otherwise your comment adds nothing but noise.1 - Me
@Me Feel free to disagree if you want, my comment is not noise. It lets the asker know that the answer is out there on this site if they search for it. – UserOne
Clearly UserOne disagrees with me, which is fine; but it has left me wondering: we like that someone asking a question researches first, the OP here demonstrates (at least cursory, and non-productive) research effort. This user has left a comment which s/he feels appropriate stating that there are duplicates, but chooses not to point them out to the OP, or to others in the community.
This feels, to me, a dismissive action; it provides no help to anyone and seems to be equivalent to a dismissive "go look again, properly this time," hence my reaction ("the onus is on [the commenter] to find the duplicate") and point it/them out; otherwise the comment is simply noise. Plus the ability to flag questions as duplicates (I think, it's a long time since I've had to use flags for that) and vote-to-close as duplicate leads me to believe that it's the duty of the commenter.
My question, then: in this situation, is the onus, to find the duplicate, on the person asking the question to go look again for duplicate(s), or on the person leaving the comment that duplicates exist?
- there was more to this comment, directed at the OP, but irrelevant to the question.
UserOne
is as useful as somehow answeringYes
to the questionDo you have the time?