A very common question I often see takes the form of the following:
I have made an HTTP request in <Tool A> and it works. But when I try to do the same in <Tool B> and/or <Tool C> and/or <Tool D>, it fails. What am I doing wrong?
These questions may or may not include code samples, which are mostly irrelevant to the question anyway, because the only correct answer to such a question is "we have no idea, you need to debug the various requests and see how they differ, using a tool like Fiddler".
Theoretically, such questions should thus be closed as "needs details/clarity" or "needs debugging details" since the user would already have the answer if they'd used Fiddler. The problem is that they don't know how to, and as such this represents an opportunity for us to teach them how to fish, rather than just closure/deletion.
Therefore I'm proposing a canonical question that essentially covers this scenario, with a canonical answer that basically boils down to "this is where to get Fiddler and here is how to use it". This new canonical can then be used as a dupe-close target for similar questions in future.
I know some members of the community have an issue around canonical dupes, but as far as I can tell this is mostly related to the scenario when such dupes become large and unfocused enough to end up effectively useless. I don't believe that would be the case here, which is why I'm proposing it.
Thoughts?