This answer is completely ridiculous!!!
While I understand your frustration at receiving this message, and will deal with that shortly, I want to point out that there's nothing "ridiculous" or arbitrary about the way ChrisF handled this situation. What he did is standard policy when duplicate answers are posted. Moderators receive automatic flags from the system about this situation, and we always respond in the same way: by deleting the duplicate answers and leaving a comment almost identical to the one ChrisF left for you.
This is simply grotesque and arbitrary!!! I am 60 years old, I have been programming for 41 years, and I don't need this kind of condescending behavior.
As stated above, it isn't arbitrary. It's literally our standard practice. Your age and experience have nothing to do with it. They aren't even considered by moderators. Stack Overflow doesn't care about who you are or how you identify in the real world. All we care about is contributions to this site. Contributions are evaluated by the site and by moderators on an individual basis, and if the answer you post is a duplicate or otherwise falls short of our standards, then it will be removed. This is not condescension. It's merely reflective of the fact that this is a moderated site with quality standards. We feel that this is one of our key differentiators and a large part of what both attracts users to Stack Overflow and keeps them coming back.
I cannot comment neither flag any question as duplicate because I don't have 50 reputation.
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There is so little sense in this comment that I am willing to delete all my answers and leave this site!!
This is a good point. Unfortunately, the merit of your complaint got lost among the "rant"-style character of the rest of your post. And your credibility was completely undermined the minute that you decided to "take your toys and go home" by deleting all of your posts. Leaving aside the immaturity of this response, it is simply not allowed under our license agreement and Terms of Service.
But back to the good point that you raise: this is an unfortunate dilemma, and it's an example of the Stack Overflow privilege model being imperfect. On the one hand, we restrict new users from exercising certain privileges for quality control reasons. On the other hand, it sometimes leads into impossible situations, where we're effectively asking you to do something that you cannot do. All I can say is that, on the scale that Stack Overflow operates, moderators simply cannot and do not take the time to assess the privilege levels of individual users and tailor our responses accordingly. We follow standard procedures when dealing with standard infractions like duplicate answers.
One nitpick, though: you don't need 50 reputation to flag a question as a duplicate. Only 15 reputation is required to raise a flag. (This created a bit of a dilemma before, in fact, which led to getting the privilege level lowered to 15.) But that's only a nitpick, because you only had 11 reputation at the time, which means that you didn't have the privileges to flag the question as a duplicate anyway.
Honestly, I do not understand why we limit flagging to users with a certain privilege level. Flags are reviewed by community members or moderators, so there's little harm in letting anyone raise a flag. In this case, you should have been able to raise a flag suggesting that the question was a duplicate. I am more and more thinking that even anonymous users should be able to raise moderator flags (perhaps with some extra safeguards, like flags from anonymous users not counting towards the automatic threshold for validation of spam/abusive flags).
But, let's look at specifics. You posted the following answer to this question:
You should use Opentype.js and check the web site https://opentype.js.org. Particularly interesting are glyph inspector and font inspector that you can download the source, run locally and modify. Also check my question: How to use and extract kerning pairs from from GPOS table in Opentype fonts to correctly show glyphs as Path2D in Java?.
While I'm not a subject-matter expert, I honestly fail to see how this answers the question that was asked. The person is wondering how to get HarfBuzz to support GPOS kerning. You tell them to use Opentype.js. How does that help them to solve their problem?
Maybe it does, but I can't tell. Neither could the moderator who reviewed it. Neither, I'll bet, could the original asker of the question. At best, you're missing some details that spell things out, connecting the gaps for the less knowledgeable among us. At worst, it's just a simple non-answer to the question, which moderators regularly delete. Compounding the problem, it was a repost of several other nearly identical answers provided by your account within a short period of time (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6), and it could be argued that it served little purpose but to promote your Q&A.
You should duplicate a whole answer DIFFERENTLY all over again!
Well, no. That's not exactly what the comment says. You're arguing against a straw man. I get it, you're upset. But you know how to tailor your answer to the specifics of a particular question. You did it here. It starts out giving the exact same recommendation, to use Opentype.js's glyph inspector and font inspector, but then it gives specific steps and explanation on how that applies to solve the problem presented in the question. You didn't do that on the deleted answer, and ChrisF was saying that you should have.
In fact, in this case, the advice to flag the question as a duplicate was irrelevant. It was just part of our standard boilerplate. That question about HarfBuzz is not a duplicate of your other question, even though you might recommend it be solved in a similar way. That question needs a tailored answer with specific explanation. Your answer wasn't that, which is why it was removed.