If you look at this question, it becomes a two well-known questions in one after editing when closed as a duplicate. Am I right closing it as a combination of duplicates or should this not be closed, but answered?
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13"Too broad" vs. "Two duplicates"... One is slow and useless, another frequently instant and providing info to OP... My bet is on "two duplicates", but I'd like to know community opinion on it too.– Alexei LevenkovCommented Jan 16, 2018 at 6:43
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1Doing so is perfectly acceptable when the user for example asks about the utter basics of a language feature, and the correct answer is really "go read that chapter in your book".– LundinCommented Jan 16, 2018 at 15:27
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funny as I just did that: stackoverflow.com/questions/48314664/… and was wondering the same :)– Jean-François Fabre ModCommented Jan 18, 2018 at 6:06
1 Answer
TLDR; you did the right thing.
If one answer asks
How do I do
(a + b) * (c + d)
?
And you have two other questions, one showing you how to do a + b
, and another showing you how to do x * y
, I'd say it's safe to close the first as a duplicate of the other two, rather than fragmenting the knowledge base across multiple questions.
Furthermore, we're here to help users with their problems, as long as those users have demonstrated sincere research and effort to solve their problem, first. This question in particular, has been asked numerous times in the past (being a common pandas problem, working with datetimes), so I'm willing to bet that there are other equally worthy questions to mark this as a duplicate of.
If not, vote to close as "too broad", demonstrating no research effort whatsoever. Broken code does NOT count as "research", because it only means OP half-heartedly tried something which didn't work, and ended up coming to SO to have someone else solve their problem for them, which just isn't done.
So, in summary, you've put your gold badge to good use. Nicely done.
As a side note, "what if a question is answered by 3 other questions?" In that case, I'd recommend voting to close as too broad, because users should not be asking that many questions in a single post. Each post should be self-contained, and must focus on one particular issue at a time.
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4The problem in this example is that one might not know how the parenthesis work, so they wouldn't be able to combine the two answers. Commented Jan 16, 2018 at 8:25
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3@user000001 You'd clarify that in a comment. That's a triviality, and not something I'd keep the question open for.– cs95Commented Jan 16, 2018 at 8:25
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4I find myself doing that very often. Close questions as a duplicate, and, in the comments, help OP massage the dupe target's answer into their own. Works (almost) every time :)– cs95Commented Jan 16, 2018 at 8:26
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yes a clarifying comment would be helpful in these cases Commented Jan 16, 2018 at 8:28
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6At some point there's a threshold where the explanation-in-comments becomes worthy of being an answer. When it putting together the pieces from 3 or more questions, or multiple comments, I sometimes end up re-opening questions I've dup-hammered, and posting my comments as an answer (which links to the other questions), once I realize it's taking more explanation than I planned. But mostly I only do this if the question is also interesting and non trivial. Commented Jan 16, 2018 at 15:47
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I would find another question along the lines of "How do parenthesis work in X?" to add to the duplicate list– user4639281Commented Jan 18, 2018 at 0:04
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@TinyGiant you could nitpick the specific example all you like, but the truth is that it depends, and it's something you'd have to handle on a case-by-case basis. Sometimes a comment is required, sometimes another duplicate is required. Sometimes the question is so poor, it isn't worth doing anything else beyond closing.– cs95Commented Jan 18, 2018 at 0:12
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2@PeterCordes yes, otherwise you fall into the "everything is a duplicate" obsession.– Jean-François Fabre ModCommented Jan 18, 2018 at 6:09
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I miss the times where duplicates means "all possible answers to A and B are identical".– BraiamCommented Jan 18, 2018 at 15:35