There is a question asked today that, I think, would make a good canonical question for a question that has been asked, with different specifics, hundreds of times here in Stack Overflow.
The question is about database design for superclasses and subclasses, although the questioner doesn't use that terminology.
Here is the question.
It's about to be closed as "too broad". And it is too broad. But I think it would make a very good canonical question. It needs to be reworded slightly. It needs a good canonical answer. My answer needs improvement to be a canonical answer, but it's a start. One improvement would be to get rid of the references to the three tags, which are fairly worthless tags anyway.
The third thing needed would be some way of guiding people with a question that is about designing database tables for subclasses to the canonical question and its answer. We get at least a dozen such questions every week, and we could save ourselves and the questioners a whole lot of time and trouble if we could guide them to the right place.
I've never been down this road before, so I really need your opinions and your help. Are there reasons to discard this question as a canonical question? Is it better to concoct a question to be self answered for this purpose? And here's the big question: how do you help people who have a specific question, but don't recognize the canonical question as being related to their question? Almost no one who asks a database and subclass question recognizes it as such.
Edit:
I have taken a shot at rewording the question, including the title.
I changed the title to make it more relevant to the question being asked. I changed the body to include 3 illustrative examples. The idea is to let the reader know what the question is really talking eabout.
These fixes may be inadequate or even counterproductive. I just don't know.
I also changed my answer to make it look more like the answer I gave over at the DBA site. This runs contrary to DRY. it might be more productive for me to give one of thOse "may be answered here" comments.
Edit:
The question has been closed. This discussion is now moot. I'm not going to try to write my own canonical question. I don't think I'm all that good at such a thing. I'm going to try to start using the "This question may be answered here" comment. See how that goes. Others can vote to close, if they so choose.