This Question was marked as duplicate, 10 minutes later he wrote the same question with a different title and it was answered here. Was it a bad decision to mark it as a duplicate?
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No, you can mark the new version as a duplicate as well.– BSMPJun 30, 2016 at 5:58
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I did that already.. lol– sujith karivelilJun 30, 2016 at 5:58
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12The presence of answers says nothing. The people who posted the answers may not be aware of any duplicates.– LundinJun 30, 2016 at 10:48
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7@Lundin but they should.– Your Common SenseJun 30, 2016 at 15:20
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3The King is dead. Long live the King.– Hack-RJun 30, 2016 at 18:22
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3@YourCommonSense It's unrealistic to expect every user to either 1) be aware of the content of every single question on the site, so they can instinctively know when any new question is a duplicate, or 2) research every question they want to answer, and scour every previously-asked question that might be related to find any possible duplicates, before posting an answer.– Justin Time - Reinstate MonicaJun 30, 2016 at 21:53
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5@JustinTime: actually, it's entirely realistic to expect every user considering writing an answer to first do at least a minimal search on the topic, i.e. copy/paste the question title and search for that. Yes, it is still possible for duplicates to slip through, but the bulk of the problem is that most people answering don't stop to think for even the slightest moment whether they are about to answer a question that's already been answered before.– Peter DunihoJun 30, 2016 at 23:03
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@PeterDuniho While that's a good idea, as you said, it doesn't guarantee that they'll catch every duplicate. While this is likely only because we parse things differently, I read "but they should [be aware of any duplicates]" as meaning that anyone that posts an answer should be aware of any duplicate questions, not just common ones. That's what I was replying to, the expectation that before posting an answer, a user should first guarantee that the question isn't a duplicate of any previously-existing question.– Justin Time - Reinstate MonicaJun 30, 2016 at 23:07
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...This may be because I sometimes tend to take things too far, and/or misread things in a way that implies that they should be taken too far, though.– Justin Time - Reinstate MonicaJun 30, 2016 at 23:08
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9To add insult to injury, the referenced question and answer is a classic example of how screwed up SO is a lot of the time. Not only did a 95K user answer a question that never should have been answered, they didn't actually solve the problem, and yet in spite of both of those issues, got FOUR upvotes? That's just insane.– Peter DunihoJun 30, 2016 at 23:09
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1@PeterDuniho "it's entirely realistic to expect every user..." Hmm, they are not. I wonder how prevalent the undesired behavior is, even a small percent of users who ask first and search later will clog things up? I wonder how users can be (easily) trained or if the site can help more, maybe by offering search results similar to the question before you can click [Post]?– Dustin AndrewsJul 1, 2016 at 0:05
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1@JustinTime and your comments is an example how the meta site works. You are not interested in the problem in question, you are interested in an argument.– Your Common SenseJul 1, 2016 at 2:56
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@YourCommonSense Not true. I'm not interested in arguing, I'm solely pointing out that it is indeed unrealistic to expect everyone to spend an hour making sure the question has never been asked & answered before, instead of spending the same or less time actually answering it. If the question is common, then yes, it's realistic to expect them to check for duplicates. If it's an odd or obscure case that one wouldn't expect to come up frequently, if at all, it's usually better to assume that the asker already checked for answers.– Justin Time - Reinstate MonicaJul 2, 2016 at 17:25
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Both questions have now been deleted.– Peter MortensenJul 3, 2016 at 5:40
2 Answers
Vote to close it again, either as a duplicate of the first, or of the duplicate the original was closed as; preferably the latter, if possible.
You may also leave a note to the OP that they shouldn't be asking the same question twice, they should be updating their first question to include any new information that further explains the problem; and why it isn't a duplicate, if applicable.
Example:
Please don't ask
[the same question](link to first)
twice; update your existing one with new information.
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6Umm ... The "marked as duplicate" info box explicitly says "If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question." Nothing in there about updating the marked-as-duplicate question with new information.– R.M.Jun 30, 2016 at 18:13
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1@R.M. - That info box doesn't mean you should re-ask the exact same question without new information... but you raise a good point..– SayseJun 30, 2016 at 18:34
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Just relax. That's the way Stack Overflow is intended to work - to let people gain their reputation points by means of answering duplicated questions.
Think that other ten celebrated zillions of questions are all unique? Come on, face the facts.
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