I think the question as stated is irrelevant if SO has a consistent model on what 'close as dupe' means. However, SO does not have a consistent model of what 'close as dupe' means (or to be more precise: Many tag communities do not appear to apply the model properly!).
Thus, it boils down to: Well, either [A] we rewrite what 'close as dupe' actually means first, and then we can answer this question properly, or [B] we figure out why so many tag-communities don't apply the model properly and either start a plan to teach these communities to do it correctly (quite an ordeal, to be sure!), or figure out why the intended model isn't working for a tag community and add some tools to alleviate whatever was ailing them.
To explain in more detail:
There are only three options for any given asked question:
- The question is 99% to 100% in effect equivalent to some earlier-asked question.
- The question is different but only in effectively irrelevant detail: The only crux of the issue is the same as some other question, however, the way the question is stated makes it obvious that the one who asked the question does not understand this. An example: A very common (once a day, at least) occurrence on the Java-tag SO is a question that is long and rambling because the asker doesn't quite understand what's going wrong, with all sorts of details included. A glance at the code and what the asker describes makes clear that there is only one problem: They are using
==
to compare strings, which in Java does not compare values (it compares reference identity). These questions are invariably closed as a duplicate of some 20 year old SO question specifically about it. That question isn't a bad link: It has no irrelevant detail and the accepted answer explains the issue succinctly. Nevertheless, this is for the question asker, not the best experience: Unless someone puts in the effort to add a comment to explain why their question was closed-as-dupe of that seemingly completely unrelated one, they have to surmise that the fact their question was marked as a dupe of that other one means they need to read the other one, understand what it implies, and then apply this lesson to their situation, and lo! Their problem disappears as snow in the noon sun.
- The question is merely quite similar to some earlier-asked question, but not entirely the same. For example, an array is involved.
Mark-as-duplicate is entirely appropriate for option #1, and really not appropriate anywhere else - because pragmatically speaking you can't give any context. It's just 'this was closed as duplicate of that', and that's all you get. There isn't even room for a comment as part of a close-as-dupe vote. You can, at best, add a comment to the question and hope that it is read. Thus, there is no room to explain how to apply the linked-to-answer to arrays (for case #3 above), or to explain that the only actual problem is using ==
to compare strings, as per case #2.
In other words, mark as duplicate does not seem appropriate (to me, at any rate) as some sort of extremist 'link to another batch of answers' setup. It doesn't even link to an answer - it links to a question.
That leaves #1. Now, this is rarely applied. For example, case #2, specifically about string compare? I can show you hundreds of Java questions asked on the Java-tag in the past year that were dealt with by closing as duplicate of 'how to compare strings in Java'. Many of those really could do with some more context.
However, if one goes with the seemingly only correct answer (in that SO's lack of ability to add answers to closed-as-dupe questions strongly suggests 'close as dupe' is appropriate only if the question is almost entirely similar, and in no other case) - then this point is moot: Then by definition the new question doesn't add anything useful, and thus SO should either add more policing options and to clarify that close-as-dupe is appropriate only if the question is 99%+ similar to an earlier one, and then if SO as a whole decides that such questions ought to be deleted, to delete them. Notably, any existing answers should be repatriated in the original - it's more of a 'merge questions' option at that point.
Of course, in practice, that would probably not work, at least, not without a serious change in the community approach: Currently close-as-dupe is used a ton in case #2, and is also used in case #3 - even though I tend not to do this, as I think close-as-dupe is appropriate solely in case #1.
I think the current SO model is not appropriate, at all, for most programming tags, and Java in particular:
Languages evolve. A question can be 100% the same as some 15-year-old question, but that 15-year-old question has an accepted, 800-point answer that is entirely inappropriate now, 15 years after the fact. I have no idea how one could go about fixing such a situation. As a rule I strongly prefer to just answer the new question and not mark it as a dupe, because it seems blatantly misleading and incorrect if the suggested action (mark as dupe of the 15 year old one with the 800-point accepted answer that is now outdated and possibly even straight up wrong) leads to the asker being misinformed. Nevertheless, I'm being trained not to bother to do so, as most likely the question will be closed halfway through me trying to answer it in a way that is up to date with modern standards.
There is no way to attempt to address an old answer: I would prefer it if a sufficient amount of community members can all chip in to mark an answer simply as 'obsoleted', which then opens the door to adding a new answer that can then go through the paces and get upvoted over time. As is, it just isn't feasible to attempt to add an answer with the update: Nobody ever sees it. They scroll down, see the 800+ gorilla, and stop scrolling. I can't even close-as-dupe by linking to an answer, I can only close-as-dupe by linking to a question.
There are plenty of questions with the Java tag that go unanswered, so rapid-closing the obvious ones is better than if they just straight up go unanswered. I don't want to create the impression that I think the Java-tag community is messing up by closing-as-dupe so many questions. I'm merely raising the point that the mental model of what 'close-as-dupe' means is nebulous to me. The way the community appears to use it does not mesh with what 'close as dupe' technically ends up doing.