When a question is believed to have been wrongly closed, the advice that is given to them is to "update your question and explain why it is different from the other" (ironically, this question is closed as a duplicate of a duplicate). But what if the question really is a duplicate?
- The OP believes the question does not apply to them (usually because they failed to narrow down the source of the problem and the question doesn't outright specify their particular use case)
- They don't understand how to apply the solution to their own code
- They didn't scroll past the selected answer to find an answer that would be more appropriate to their specific case
Example "reasons" I have seen for why the OP's question is not a duplicate of the designated question:
- "This is not a duplicate" (seriously, no reason given, just "not a duplicate")
- "I am using a loop, but that question isn't" (but the thing the OP wants to do inside the loop is the same)
- "That question is old" (and the technology hasn't changed since then)
- "I need to have 3 background images, but that question only shows how to do it with some other number" (or the target question explains the syntax for multiple backgrounds rather than giving something the OP can copy/paste)
- "I want to do X, and that question doesn't have a solution that lets me do X" (where X is not possible and the target question offers the only solutions that exist given that X is not possible)
In a perfect world, users who are looking through the reopen queue would see their reasoning for the BS that it is. However, I have seen questions opened simply because the OP said "it's not a duplicate" and no further explanation given.
I had a different question in mind when I started writing this question, but I think a better use case has come along today:
Timeline:
- I left a comment stating that I thought it was a possible duplicate of this CSS question (I didn't want to close right away because I have a gold badge)
- OP responds with "I don't see how that's related to my problem" (automatically deleted because it referenced the dupe target question)
- I request the output of the CSS a second time so that I can be certain
- OP responds by posting a screenshot of their browser's DOM inspector
- I close it as a duplicate
- OP raises a custom flag and a moderator reopens the question
- OP does nothing to prove that the question is not a duplicate (a simple "I changed
background-image
tobackground
and the problem was the same" would have sufficed)
Since the moderator in question is also a gold badge holder for one of the other tags on the question, they would have been able to reopen the question with a single vote even if they weren't a moderator. So I don't think this is a misuse of the mod's powers.
The comments that were removed by a second mod:
- I leave a comment for the first mod asking why they reopened it
- OP responds by gloating "It was reopened because it was a duplicate" and said something to the effect of "if you're not going to be helpful, go away"
- I respond with "I'm not talking to you" and pointed out they did nothing to prove it wasn't a duplicate
- OP responds with "The proposed answer in that question will not work in a rails app in production environment. I do not appreciate your tone or attitude. As mentioned before your action was not helpful. Thank you"
My reasoning for why this is a duplicate: by comparing the screenshot (the first image) of the OP's source code to the screenshot of the screenshot of the DOM inspector (the second image), we can see that the subject of the question (the image-url()
function) appears to be behaving as it should (image-url(something.jpg)
is replaced with image-url(/path/to/something.jpg)
). We can also see from the screenshot of the DOM inspector that the browser is unhappy about the declaration in question because it is crossed out and has a warning symbol next to it. Depending on the browser, this can mean different things (either the property is being overwritten or it is invalid). In this particular instance, the property has invalid values.
So the question becomes, why are we voting to reopen questions without verifying that the question is not duplicate?
background-image
, and in the question in question, the scss is not doing that. Maybe you're mistaken in closing it as a duplicate.background-image: url(/images/44.jpg) repeat top center fixed;
. The background-image property only accepts a single value, which is why the inspector has it crossed out. Still think I was mistaken?image-url
. Whether they left out details should have been determined through conversation rather than assumed. It would certainly peeve me if someone assumed my question was a duplicate of another without clear evidence. Shouldn't the burden of proof be on the one doing the closing?repeat top center fixed
come from?" I don't think the screenshot proves anything other than the fact that the generated CSS matches the duplicating question, which is different than the OP's code duplicating the question.background-image: image-url('/images/backgrounds/44.jpg') repeat top center fixed;
. Ironically, the OP thought having the offending source code made the question "less clear" (see: stackoverflow.com/posts/32142228/revisions)