The most recent example I'm aware of is this one (10k rep only), where a user mistakenly interpreted the ^
character as an exponentiation operator instead of correctly identifying it as the XOR operator. However, I've seen this happen a few times in the last few months to various questions of varying quality, and I'm confused as to why these questions get deleted.
Fine, whatever, the user goofed, the question was (correctly) tagged as a duplicate and got downvoted (correctly) for showing a lack of research.
But why was it then deleted?
My understanding of the model that Stack Exchange uses is that questions tagged as duplicates, for unregistered users, redirect to the question they were tagged as a duplicate of.
Which means that duplicate questions are, nominally speaking, a good thing for the stack: they enable us to better optimize search engine utilization, to help make sure that when multiple people ask the same essential question in subtly different ways that would normally get past an algorithm, we can instead ensure they get directed to the correct posts that will best answer their questions.
Deleting these questions, on the other hand, negates this benefit.
What about my understanding of the policy is wrong? Is there a reason I'm not considering why it's important for questions like this to be deleted?
^
operator, while the duplicate is related to how to raise number to a power. 2) If you search the exact question title on Google, you will find question regarding "Why 2 to the 0 is 1?", which are irrelevants. This backs CodeGray's answer saying that question involving operators are usually hard to find by search engines. 3) The question got to -8 before being closed / deleted, this is kind of repellent for anyone hiting this question, even before seeing the dupe.