I came across this question, which essentially asks how to hide an element in CSS. The question shows low effort, low grammar quality, and little usability due to being centered around an extremely fundamental topic.
Someone closed the question as a duplicate of this question. I heartily agree with the action of closing this as a duplicate, but not as much with the dupe target itself.
The title of the dupe target sounds very promising. It sounds much like one of those decade-old multi-thousand-vote canonicals that drive people to SO. But further inspection proves otherwise.
- Complicated: This question and its answers involve use of the
visibility
property, the tilde~
selector, property inheritance, and comma usage. These are quite simple topics when discussed succinctly in their own post (observe), but combined make this an overly confusing dupe target unlikely to help the OP.
Chances are if you are unsure about hiding an element in CSS, you might struggle to make heads or tails of this question. It may have been a long day for me, but even I struggle to comprehend it.
Not reproducible: The entire problem in the question was actually caused by [what could be considered to be] a typo: an improper comma.
Unclear in purpose: The answers don't even interpret the question in the same way. The accepted answer simply writes code to solve the OP's problem (the typo), the next gives a list of ways to hide an element, and the last writes a jQuery function.
I'm slightly unsure of my call to action here, but I suppose I wanted a second opinion on this dupe target. Is it confusing? Is it more efficiently represented in separate posts? Why is is so highly upvoted?
Page not found
for the link of the question you came across.~
. So I would consider it a suitable dupe. Regarding "Unclear in purpose" ... those answers provide different ways to hide elements, so that Q&A is even more usable as a dupe target.