Who are people who flag duplicate questions?
I am.
How are they motivated to do this (highly helpful) job? I'm asking because I do not see how the review system and provided tools could motivate anybody to search for duplicate questions (e.g., in the First Posts queue)...
Well. I do not cross on red. I wear a bike helment when biking. I use toilets instead of wall-corners or parking garage staircases. I look/know basic dupes and tag as such. Why would I not flag?
My motivation? I wan't to leave a place better then I found it ~ or at least not worse. Flagging dupes makes SO a better place, easier to search, more conceise - that should be enough reward.
Same for flagging - it was nice to get some rep when starting it but I still flag even without rep.
How to find dupes?
I would guess (for python, python-3.x and python-2.x) about 80%-90% of the errors are 'beginner' errors of which I know that duplicates exists - it' is simply searching and posting them.
How do you learn what dupes exist if you are new to a tag?
I started reading the first 2-4 pages (https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/python?sort=votes&pageSize=50) or so of highes ranking q&A on the topic that I am active in (all 3 of them to be precise) - my guess would be this to be a good starting point for any language. Then you collect 5-10k points working through beginner questions and patterns emerge.
Python has typical beginner errors:
Searching dupes faster then other can also be a game - even without rep
- you can read about intrinsic motivation - that is far better (in the long run) then rep-points.
site:stackoverflow.com ⟨specific keywords⟩
in Google, the specific question I’m looking for is within the first three results”. Sometimes what I’m looking for is within the type-ahead suggestions in the close-as-duplicate dialog or my browser history. You may have to know some Google-fu. I don’t waste a lot of time searching duplicates.