10

If I am not satisfied with the answer for a question that was asked and answered on Stack Overflow? How can I raise the same question again, without breaking Stack Overflow laws?

For example, I feel it would be good to have better answers for this question.

6
  • 5
    Identify the parts of the answer you feel are missing, and then ask that question. Commented Dec 15, 2016 at 14:55
  • 8
    Why do you think that you will get different answers if you re-ask it? Do you plan to change something about how the question is asked, or are you just going to re-ask the exact same thing?
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Commented Dec 15, 2016 at 14:58
  • 3
    There's a bounty option exactly for this purpose, but you don't have enough reputation to do that yet.
    – Glorfindel
    Commented Dec 15, 2016 at 14:59
  • meta.stackoverflow.com/users/366904/cody-gray I still feel some more explanation is needed since there is very little documentation available to understand clearly.
    – Kid
    Commented Dec 15, 2016 at 15:27
  • Side note: "read documentation and explain it to me" kind of questions usually not accepted well on SO. It is very hard to make such question concrete... and if there is source code for library such question is likely collect well deserved downvotes. Commented Dec 17, 2016 at 7:27
  • By editing your question to make it more clear, you are able to get to answer better
    – john22
    Commented Dec 8, 2020 at 14:19

1 Answer 1

9

You cannot ask the question again, because it would be closed as a duplicate. You could post a new question, but you have to be very careful and state exactly why the original question (not the desired answer) is different from yours.

The last (and best option, once you have the necessary reputation (75)) is to put a bounty on the question, with one of the following bounty reasons (depending on your exact needs):

Current answers are outdated

The current answer(s) are out-of-date and require revision given recent changes.

Improve details

The current answers do not contain enough detail.

You can put additional comments in your bounty notice, to specify exactly what you are looking for in an answer.

4
  • 4
    "but you have to be very careful and state exactly why the original question (not the desired answer) is different from yours." You could also explain why none of the answers answers your specific question. (The common guidance) If the answers don't answer your question, it's really not a duplicate. However, you really have explain why the answers don't work for you: Errors, specific restrictions they hit, etc.
    – Kendra
    Commented Dec 15, 2016 at 15:06
  • 2
    What if the duplicate has no answers at all, but later another person needs an answer on this question? One way would be to set bounty on the old, but what if the user has not enough reputation yet? Commented Dec 14, 2017 at 13:58
  • @TimSchmelter on main sites, you can't close a question as a duplicate unless the target has answers (or was asked by the same user).
    – Glorfindel
    Commented Dec 14, 2017 at 14:10
  • This was referenced in comments to the 2023-10-16 article "After ChatGPT disruption, Stack Overflow lays off 28 percent of staff" (referenced in the MSE post What is the best way to keep Stack Overflow strong now that we have ChatGPT?) (near "at least once or twice"). Commented Oct 28, 2023 at 22:09

You must log in to answer this question.

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