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I recently came to this question:

and saw it is closed as a being a duplicate for this one:

The first question has:

  • 82 upvotes
  • ~70K views
  • 2 good answers

plus being ~3 months older than the second question and being close to removal (7 delete votes up to now) and not the same question as the first question.

I think I should tell the differences because it received a considerable number of delete votes in a month and it is not the first question that I'm seeing to be a similar victim. So please read on:

  • First question,

    1. asks for replacing _ with a space character
    2. asks for g modifier but is not the main problem
  • Second question,

    1. asks for matching a pattern
    2. asks for g modifier which is the main problem

Knowing the differences the first question could be a duplicate for one of these instead:

(one is closed for the other, but has got no delete votes)

For now I can edit the duplicate question to one or both of these two questions, leave it alone or re-open it to neutralize the delete votes which I think are cast for an inaccurate reason but it leaves two questions unanswered:

  1. What if I didn't hit that question in delete queue?

  2. and how many questions are removed the same way and or are in the queue to be removed?

12
  • 2
    "What if I didn't hit that question in delete queue?" - Plenty of stuff gets undeleted on the regular. The weight of the world isn't on your shoulders here. Dec 20, 2018 at 10:59
  • 1
    "What if I didn't hit that question in delete queue?" - irrelevant, you did catch it. People will make mistakes, there is no stopping that. So bonus points that there is such a thing as a queue which allows mistakes to be caught.
    – Gimby
    Dec 20, 2018 at 11:00
  • 8
    In a community driven network the first commentator says the weight isn't on your shoulders and the second person says you did catch it however I did catch it by chance and I'm here because of that chance. I could hit the queue in the next one or two weeks and never see it.
    – revo
    Dec 20, 2018 at 11:05
  • 6
    The question they are trying to delete is the first result you get when you search for "regular expression g" in google.
    – ayhan
    Dec 20, 2018 at 11:47
  • 8
    Frankly, these reviewers' time (7x delete-voters) would be better spent writing more comprehensive answers to canonicals (to their liking, so they don't feel the urge to delete them).
    – jpp
    Dec 20, 2018 at 11:50
  • 8
    @jpp It's not very fair to blame individual deletion reviewers here. The delete-vote queue is fundamentally flawed, everyone would make mistake sometimes, but that queue only accumulates mistakes if a question is incorrectly placed into it. 1000 reviewers think it shouldn't be deleted, but if another 10 cast the vote, it gets deleted. To make it worse, a deleted question is effectively invisible even to 10k users, since no one has a link to it. So once it's deleted, it's almost deleted forever.
    – llllllllll
    Dec 20, 2018 at 12:45
  • 2
    @liliscent is entirely correct, ideally there would be a "vote to NOT delete", that would cancel a pending delete vote before it gets deleted, but it's unlikely that will happen any time soon.
    – user000001
    Dec 20, 2018 at 13:10
  • @liliscent, I didn't mean to place blame, though I understand how my comment can come across that way. But IMO it's still the case their time would be better spent improving canonicals. It's true the system is geared more towards reviewing than improving popular Q&As.
    – jpp
    Dec 20, 2018 at 14:53
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    @jpp I respectfully disagree with your "improving canonical" part. A popular question gets popular for a reason. Take the regex question here as an example, the answer is only two sentences, but the vote and view show that it's very useful. It's risky to try to "improve" a popular Q&A like this one, because the editor's good-faith attempt (e.g. make it longer or more comprehensive) might make it less useful to all the viewers.
    – llllllllll
    Dec 20, 2018 at 15:10
  • 4
    @liliscent, I've posted many answers to old Q&A where the accepted answer is highly upvoted. If I think I can add value, I post answers to 5yr old questions as readily as I do to a new question. The Necromancer badge is actually the one I value above all others. If you're competent, you shouldn't believe it's innately risky to contribute to canonicals, that's how errors propagate.
    – jpp
    Dec 20, 2018 at 16:26
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    @jpp Adding new answer isn't the risky way I was referring to. There are some users that try to edit the top answer of a popular question and add a lot of tangentially related stuff try to make it more "comprehensive". That's very risky no matter how competent you are. Radically changing the representation of a highly voted post is not acceptable, that's what was trying to say in the last comment.
    – llllllllll
    Dec 20, 2018 at 16:53
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    "and how many questions are removed the same way and or are in the queue to be removed?" Not enough. meta.stackoverflow.com/a/296609/792066 Self deletion is the leading cause of deletion.
    – Braiam
    Dec 22, 2018 at 20:00

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