DRY questions (as normally stated) are not on topic for Stack Overflow.
We're a site dedicated to useful programming knowledge. While DRY questions typically embody 'programming' and 'knowledge', they're far less useful than they need to be to a wider internet audience.
Here's why:
"DRY" questions typically have a title that isn't useful to your every day Googler (Our audience, as it turns out):
Take this title:
How would I make this Racket Code DRYer?
There are a grand total of two words in that title that have any google juice: "Racket" and "DRY" (hoping google is smart enough to discern DRY from dry).
So we have an immediate problem: Anyone who has a similar issue to the OP won't be able to find their answer.
Then we get into the meat of the OP's problem:
The problem is that it's not very DRY. Since I'm using a Lisp, and Lisp is known for being able to do crazy things, I want to know if there's a way to take all the subprocess code and extract it so I can do something like: (code removed)
Again, no google juice here. That means that the problem will likely not be found by other people on the internet, which is a core tenet of Stack Overflow: Whatever question you pose needs to have utility for others.
It's the "If a tree falls in the forest" problem: If no one can find your question when they have the same problem, it needs to be edited or closed until it's improved.
DRY questions typically have these problems; I just took this example because it's the newest iteration I saw.
DRY questions as a whole are inherently un-googleable. As such, they should be off topic (our old close reason "too localized" would have been a good fit for this):

Code Review was made for such questions; they've specifically focused on improving code; whereas those types of questions are ostensibly about programming, but not useful to others unless they're written really really well.