Or maybe just change the text for the existing close as typo. The current description is:
Not reproducible or was caused by a typo
While similar questions may be on-topic here, this one was resolved in a way less likely to help future readers.
There are A LOT of questions where the solution is very unlikely to help future readers.
The questions I'm talking about are debugging questions that fulfills two things:
They are about a well-known problem, like inserting in linked lists, finding the maximum in a tree, implementing a bubble sort etc.
The user does not seem to be interested in reading other people's code. They only want to find the bug in their particular code.
These questions rarely become good questions that help others. Often the "close as a typo" is appropriate, but it's also very common that the answer is more complex than that. And since the question usually is "What's wrong with my code that is trying to do X" rather than "How do I do X? Here is my current approach" it does not feel right to close it as a duplicate.
Can I use "close as a typo" in these situations? Or can I even close as a duplicate? If typo is not an option, should we change the description? In that case, I suggest changing the title from "Not reproducible or was caused by a typo" to "Not reproducible or the answer is unlikely to help anyone else than OP"
I think that the fact that the answer is unlikely to help anyone else is way more important than the reason (typo) behind that fact.
if (x = 5)
not doing comparison). In either case, OP's stance on which code they want to read isn't very relevant.