How do I ask a question that is close to a duplicate avoiding "closed as a duplicate", including the usual downvotes?
- Ask a non-duplicate question. It is for others who earned the privilege to vote for closing a question to decide whether it is duplicate or not. We cannot predict how your question will fare, should it be closed, or does it merit its own Q&A until you post it.
- Ask a good question. Downvotes usually accompany questions with a lack of research, prior effort, too specific, or too broad ones. Asking an obvious duplicate or insisting on the post being sufficiently different because the environment is different (or something similar) is also likely to attract downvotes.
there always will be high-k dudes with no willingness to read and understand the question
Sure there will be, and sometimes this is a valid complaint (in that case, take it here, and present your case as clear as possible without accusations). That said, try to understand the other side here: those who you call "high-k dudes" are mostly here for at least half a decade, and are usually very active in their respective areas. This also means they have been working in the area they frequent for at least that long (or more).
These people have a lot of experience, are likely to have duplicate targets bookmarked, and usually can see that at its core the question can be sufficiently answered by a canonical Q&A (or just a good enough one).
Finally, closing is a peer-review system where a question requires 3 people with voting privileges to agree that it needs to be closed or a binding vote of a person with a gold tag badge (or a mod, but in general they refrain from doing so unless they happen to be experts in the matter).
I didn't ask the question again but asked here
Don't try to optimize prematurely - post a question, respond to criticism, politely discuss its validity with those who closed it (if it is closed). Take it to a respective chat room if possible. If nothing helps, and you are still convinced it should be opened - post a question on Meta (again, I cannot stress it enough: be respectful of your peers and present the case as clearly as possible).
and now I will see the down-votes
This is called the meta-effect. When you post a link to a post on meta, you expose it to a higher level of scrutiny than you would normally get. And depending on the context of the conversation here and the quality of the post, it may be either a positive or negative effect (don't expect people not having a negative bias if you chose a defensive stance and calling them as you did in comments).
Useful References
- How should duplicate questions be handled?
- Someone flagged my question as already answered, but it's not
Disclosure: the answer was prepared before the question in discussion was posted