26

What is the best way to ask someone if they ever found an answer to their question? For example, I was looking at this question, and it was asked seven months ago. What is the best way to ask if the issue has been resolved (so that I could use the same solution)? Should I comment on the question? Or is there another standard approach?

5

2 Answers 2

33

If it's the same exact question as you have,

  1. Once you have the appropriate rep, comment and ask if the OP found a solution and hope he answers back.
  2. Vote the question up
  3. When you have enough reputation, you could offer a bounty on the question to get it more attention.
  4. edit the question if there is anything you can do to make the question better without changing the meaning of the question or the askers intent.
3
  • 29
    Apart from what you mentioned :- Don't add new answer and ask OP "is problem solved"? Commented Jul 28, 2015 at 19:47
  • 4
    Personally, I think "Does anyone know if such a thing exists?" makes the question sound like a tool request. I kind of want to change it to "Is this possible?" but then it might be too broad. "Is there an existing option for this in Visual Studio or Visio?" might be too different from the author's intent.
    – BSMP
    Commented Jul 28, 2015 at 21:15
  • A fairly important note: if you vote the question up, the owner will receive some reputation and they will get a notification of this the next time they visit the site, thus reminding them of the existence of the question. Commented Oct 17, 2017 at 14:02
6

If a question does not have any answers, other questions cannot be duped against it. This is an intentional limitation. If you have a question which is not adequately answered elsewhere on the site, you can ask it anew, even if it is unanswered elsewhere.

Now, just because you can do this doesn't mean you should. If the other question is well-worded, a bounty is probably a more effective means of getting an answer. But for old, unloved questions that never got answers, you may have better luck asking a brand-new question.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .