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I found a question that is likely to be a frequently-asked question, namely this one.

The answer there answers a question many will have, on the meaning of a confusing AWS CloudFormation error message.

At the moment, this Q&A is hard to find. When searching for the key phrases on Google, Stack Overflow is outranked by a number of other hits, like answers buried in comments at GitHub etc.

My hope is that when someone types the search phrase into Google, "aws cloudformation template format error unsupported structure", they should find that question and its answer. It will be better still if they find a clearly-worded question there, and know immediately that they are in the right place.

So, can I edit that question extensively, remove all the extraneous text, change the title, and make it clearly ask the right question? If not, what else can I do?

See also:

  • This related unanswered question, which could also do with an answer.
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  • If it is outranked by a number of other sites, either SO's SEO is badly screwed, or the others are doing a much better job!
    – CinCout
    Mar 22, 2019 at 4:47
  • Not that I know much about SEO but I assume it is outranked as a result of other posts (e.g. AWS developer forums) mentioning the key phrase in the title, and this question going with "AWS cloudformation command fails on AWS example templates". Mar 22, 2019 at 4:51
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    That is part of on-page SEO. But yeah, I get what you mean.
    – CinCout
    Mar 22, 2019 at 4:51
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    That question is kindasorta off topic, tho. Be more on topic at SF.
    – user1228
    Mar 22, 2019 at 16:56
  • 2
    Questions about tools used by developers are not off-topic. Mar 23, 2019 at 2:31
  • Additionally, AWS CloudFormation is a domain-specific language and is as much programming as YAML, HTML etc etc so, as a .NET developer wading in outside your area of expertise, would you be so kind as to retract the close vote? Mar 23, 2019 at 4:24

1 Answer 1

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I didn't receive any answers here, but quite a few upvotes, which I interpret as suggesting this is fine. I'm marking this as the accepted answer.

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