C++ has this issue, which is called "most vexing parse". It is a never-ending source for duplicate questions. It seems that we don't have a canonical answer for that. But worse, we have a highly-upvoted question, which has "most vexing parse" in the title, but asks about a different thing (it asks about some corner case in the "most vexing parse" issue).
The problem is when someone asks a question, the answer to which is, "most vexing parse". People (who know the answer and want to mark as duplicate) naturally search for "most vexing parse", find a highly-upvoted question with answer, and mark as duplicate without reading. Because, honestly, if you know the answer to that mind-boggling issue, you don't want to read and understand the question and answer for 69th time in your life.
So, questions often get duplicate-closed with a link to a loosely-related and highly technical question and answer, leaving OPs scratching their heads and complaining about the injustice of it all.
Can we do anything constructive in this situation?
T(())
in the title for a question that isn't about that -- should know better.A a(());
is not shown. i.sstatic.net/UwqCe.png I have no idea why Google might be doing this, but it makes any suggestions involving the post title more complicated.T t(())
but alsoT t((a))
... it would make improper duplicate marking more prevalent, not less.