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This question is similar to How to rephrase a question?.

I've encountered a problem recently and found that someone else has asked the question. It took a while to see that the problem was the exact same one as mine. I think that there's a lot of redundant code to be removed. Editing the question would almost be like asking a totally new question. I'd like to improve this question and give a thorough answer as well. Should I:

  1. Ask a new question and answer (Q & A style).
  2. Make major edits to the question and answer it.
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    3. Ask a new question and close as duplicate? Jul 14, 2017 at 2:52
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    I'm a fan of option 2.
    – user4639281
    Jul 14, 2017 at 2:53
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    Probably a more common situation - someone else asks a poorly phrased question that sucks all the search-winds out of yours. Like stackoverflow.com/questions/37937984/… does (look at the highest voted answer vs. the accepted answer) even though the OP is rebasing Compare with the generic search stackoverflow.com/search?q=%22merge+unrelated+histories%22 where several other questions phrased much more aptly aren't getting any oxygen.
    – qneill
    Nov 29, 2017 at 20:07
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    Carefully removing redundant code seems like the right option, especially if all the answers don't address the redundant code and the question can safely be boiled down to a MRE form.
    – bad_coder
    Jan 31 at 11:47
  • @qneill Which one of those was accepted. I don't see any acceptance in the timeline for that question
    – TylerH
    Jan 31 at 16:11
  • @TylerH yeah you are right, there's no accepted answer yet. I guess my statement was a little orthogonal to this discussion. They both deal with "questions that have issues that need addressing" not necessarily because of the content, but because of how SO mechanisms expect a threaded, coherent answer and rating systems. TBH I think it's because the underlying subject matter is complicated (in the case I brought up git)
    – qneill
    Feb 2 at 2:54

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