I noticed that way too often a question gets wrongly marked as duplicate. That's a serious problem, because it prevents that the proper answer can be posted and it doesn't allow a discussion if it is truly a duplicate.
Just one example: How to retrieve int value from datagrid (C# XAML WPF) - error 'System.NullReferenceException' [duplicate] is a question about a WPF Datgrid. To answer it, one needs detailed WPF knowledge. As far as I can tell, the guys who marked the question wrongly as duplicate have no WPF knowledge. As a consequence, they think that a completely different, none WPF question about NullReferenceException is the same question. But that question gives general advice about this exception. People with experience in WPF could probably explain, why the error occurs, but they are now blocked from giving the correct answer.
Suggestion: Only people who have proven to possess expertise in the technology used in the question can mark it as duplicate. This could be done based on Tags used to mark the question and the tags for which the other users have high marks.
PS: How can the question above be "unduplicated" ?
c#
as well.int
fromnull
, you're going to get NPEs every time).NullReferenceException
is irrelevant - but the OP should take that first step themselves. The only times I regularly think that aNullReferenceException
shouldn't be marked as a dupe of that (or the equivalent in the Java universe) is when the exception is deep in someone else's code. If it's just "I've dereferenced a null reference" then the right question is "Why is this reference null?" rather than "Why am I getting an exception?"NullReferenceException
is and what causes it though. That's what the duplicate gives. If the question had been written to ask why the value was null, it wouldn't have been closed - but it looks like the OP either doesn't know what aNullReferenceException
is (in which case the duplicate is appropriate) or they do, but they couldn't be bothered to do the diagnostic work to make it a good question (in which case I have little sympathy). Neither case warrants a bad question remaining open, IMO.