About a week ago, I asked a CSS question and it got an answer, which I accepted. A little bit later, it was closed as a duplicate. The answer which I got is not one of the answers on the duplicate. Actually all of the answers on the duplicate were among the things I tried in general before I ended up asking the question (none of which worked.)
I know that duplicate questions are "signposts", but I thought that part of their utility was pointing the user to the "main" answer. Since the answer is not there on the linked duplicate, I'm wondering if the correct course of action should be to add an answer there describing this other solution (with a link back to the original to give the original author credit)?
I previously linked to the question I had which was closed as a duplicate, but since it generated a whole bunch of commentary I have removed it. (Find it in the history if you care.) I don't care about this specific question/duplicate pair; I want to know if I should be adding the answer I got to the other question mine was a duplicate of. Otherwise if someone has the same problem, it's a case of "your answer is in another castle" since the actual solution (for me) was not present on the duplicate.
fit-content
isn't even mentioned on the duplicate, and it did work. Therefore the duplicate -- if it's supposed to have the "answer" -- is incomplete. Also other than IE 11, the support for fit-content seems perfectly reasonable. – Roddy of the Frozen Peas Oct 26 '20 at 12:51