How useful would be a documentation extract, like the example linked ?
I was recently in the situation where I was looking for this exact list of changes (to show some of the benefits of a compiler upgrade). This list is exactly what I was looking for. There are several other sites that have similar lists but I couldn't easily find any "official", easily consumable list, so this isn't merely duplicating official documentation.
Is there a format a question like this should take ?
The question itself must still fit the site. It must be answerable and fit all the other various criteria. The linked question does that.
It might of course differ in tone from the questions you usually see, because most of those are "I have problem X, how can I fix it?". But contrary to some public perception, the stated objective of StackOverflow is to create a (or rather the) high quality knowledge body for programmers, not to be a programming help desk. We still tend to answer a ton of questions that have no chance of helping anyone but the asker.
It can be a good idea to create a "comprehensive dupe target" if you frequently see questions that boil down to the same problem. One such example would be What is an undefined reference/unresolved external symbol error and how do I fix it?, which means people in the C++ tag don't have to constantly rattle down a checklist in the comments to figure out how the asker messed up their build. It's less immediately helpful to whoever gets his question dupe-hammered with it (they have to read and go down the list themselves), but it's immensely valuable for keeping people in the tag sane and google results pointing to a good answer for the problem. All the duplicates also act as "signposts". Again, all in the interest of creating a high-quality knowledgebase, not of being live programming help.
Is it OK to partially dupe a question to make a reusable example from it ? If not, what is the favored way ?
IMO that might be a difficult choice to make. If you intend to create such a "comprehensive dupe target" then you probably want to write a new question specifically for that purpose, unless an existing question is already very close to that (in which case answering that and possibly editing the question to be more generally relevant might be the way to go).
Just in case you haven't read Jeff Atwood's article:
There is also some good discussion in the related questions:
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), not a link or a collection of links.