This is largely a response to mickmackusa's answer, prompted by some chat room discussion.
There are two separate cases to consider:
When the duplicates are substantively the same
I generally oppose using multiple (up to the system limit of 5) existing questions, all of which are essentially the same, to close as a duplicate.
Quantity != quality. I used to be a strong proponent of the idea that sometimes beginners need to hear the same idea explained multiple times in order to "get it", and that one of those explanations will just "click" unpredictably. However, with more experience, I have found that most of the time, the problem is simply that most crowd-sourced explanations are just not that good. While repetition does help, re-reading a quality explanation is usually better than seeking alternate explanations. (That said, sometimes an already-good explanation can be improved by, say, adding an analogy.)
We shouldn't have to send "signals" implicitly to communicate about question closure.
- If someone else dupe-hammered a question recently, and you also have a hammer, please don't reopen without some comment discussion (which of course might be migrated to chat). If there are proposals to reopen from non-hammer-wielders, use the comments for that as well (perhaps preemptively).
- If you want to tell OP to do more research, then do that explicitly in the comments. This way also provides an opportunity to, for example, demonstrate a specific web search query that would find the necessary results, or explain what jargon is needed to do the research properly.
- Everyone knows (i.e., all the self-styled curators know) that Stack Overflow is a mess and that there are way too many unclosed questions. Pointing at a specific mess is better done by using a tag-specific chat room such as https://chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/6/python - or better yet, a cleanup-effort-specific chat room such as https://chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/247434/python-canon-discussion (my own); or by opening a discussion on Meta (if you don't mind that it might take a long time for SMEs to find it).
The best way to create connectivity between questions that are the same, is for all of them to point to a canonical. The reason for connecting questions together is so that answers can be centralized and the best information is also the easiest to find.
At best, quintuple-hammering something is starting the process of cleaning up. The next steps:
- From what has been linked (or was considered for linking), figure out which is best.
- Clean up that version as much as possible.
- Link everything else to that:
- the other candidates
- the question that originally prompted the effort
- duplicates of those other candidates - to find these, I use this SEDE query (which I wrote) as a search aid
- possibly other duplicates found with the site search and with an external search engine
- Save the question for future reference. When hammering future duplicates, use
in:saves
to improve search results.
- If you happen to have answered one or more of those questions, consider migrating your content to the canonical.
Sometimes, it will happen that there is an even better canonical out there, perhaps even one that other regulars know about. It's always possible to iterate the process: edit the better version if there's anything worth editing, and re-link everything from the previous-best to the newly-identified canonical.
When the duplicates represent "pieces of the puzzle"
If solving OP's problem is straightforwardly a matter of following steps, and each one is addressed by a canonical (this actually happens a lot) then of course the question "needs more focus"; but hammer-wielders can close the question more expeditiously by closing with a duplicate of each. This has some advantages:
OP gets an answer;
FGITW gets prevented;
This leaves behind metadata indicating that someone had both problems in conjunction. If it turns out that questions keep being closed with the same combination of otherwise unrelated duplicates, that becomes a pattern that can be noticed, and cleaned up later.
My recommendation when closing in this manner:
save the question, in case such a pattern emerges.
If the pattern does emerge, establish (or create) a canonical that addresses the problem, along the lines of:
Q. How do I do Z?
A. Though it might not be obvious, the Z task is a straightforward combination of [X](canonical link for 'how do I do X?') and [Y](canonical link for 'how do I do Y?'). Simply combine these techniques as follows:
<full example, showing techniques from the best answers on the canonicals>
Then, go back to the saved questions, and re-link them to the new canonical instead of to the individual step canonicals. If this canonical was written from scratch, consider making the answer community wiki; this should encourage others to improve that answer and discourage them from writing competing answers. (Unless, of course, it turns out that there is a reasonable way to do Z other than combining X and Y. In particular, if X and Y are library functionality, the Z functionality might get directly added in a later version.)
If a pattern doesn't emerge, go back to the saved questions and vote to delete them. Generally, the pattern would only emerge because the combined task commonly needs a solution and because the combination of steps is non-obvious (such that a step-combining canonical has value).
This is, of course, asking for a lot of volunteer work; but I think this is the most streamlined workflow for it, that will get the best results.