The dupe hammer was swung again on this question: How to conditionally add predicate conditions in a LINQ query expression
The original duplicate flag was erroneous. It was based purely on the OP's focus on the join statement in both the title and the content. Anyone who is remotely familiar with LINQ expressions in the real-world should have recognised this common pattern of joining onto a users
table to obtain additional audit information. There is no secondary condition to that join, and it is always going to be a simple single column join. If you were unsure then post a comment asking for clarification.
I bet the OP is sitting there really confused how the suggested duplicate was going to help them.
The power of the duplicate hammer is that everyone wants to get on the bandwagon, processing the close review queue for duplicates, but too many people look for key words and make quick decisions, based on an inherent trust of the original wielder of the hammer.
So what happens when they get it wrong? Based on the behaviour of the SO community there is a lot of inherent responsibility to marking a question as a duplicate. Should there be some sort of penalty for wasting both a flag and everyone's time for reviewing that flag?
Duplicates also have a habit of closing questions very quickly (no, I don't have any stats, but you know it to be true ;P ) Can we have a tiered queue for flags where three strikes from lesser beings then filters it into a special queue where only those deemed worth of Mjölnir can strike the final blow?
I'm not saying that the post was great quality. The fact that it started this conversation at all proves it was a low quality post. In fact, after reading the responses from the OP to the comments, it turns out the original question was based on a simple mistaken rookie assumption. Without a serious rewrite, the post should be closed or deleted. To link this as a duplicate is just going to add to the confusion of some of these related concepts. It doesn't help the community; it hinders us.