Cynically: it depends how much power Stack Overflow has afforded you and how willing you are to deal with the consequences of your actions.
With community influence
See if you can convince the community of other "regulars" to find or prepare a more general duplicate that sidesteps the problem. Does it really make sense that questions about nullable value types and nullable reference types need to be answered separately? Yes, there are different consequences, at a technical level, to how the nulling is implemented. But if the question is being asked about the syntax, then the answer is clearly the same either way: it indicates that the type is nullable, which has the same semantic meaning. The information about both arguably should be in the same place, along with any necessary details about how it's implemented for value vs reference types.
Strictly by the book: leave a comment with the two duplicate links you have in mind, something like "This is either a duplicate of {link to X} or {link to Y}, depending on {Z}". Vote to close the question as unclear; more information is needed in order to understand it properly.
More practically: do not vote to close the question as unclear because you will permanently lose your dupe-hammer privileges for that question.
Pragmatically and cynically: Close the question as a duplicate of one, ASAP, before the FGITWs can get in. (Although they effectively get a head-start built into the system, due to the editing grace period, so it may be in vain.) Then, click the Edit link at the top-right of the closure dialog, and add the link to the other question. Finally, write a comment to explain to OP how to choose which duplicate link to visit.
However, if the system has granted you this privilege, you are also supposed to have a certain amount of subject matter expertise. Feel free to use it, if it helps.
Before asking for context, consider what's most likely. While OP should have clarified which socket definition is being used, questions like this are often asked by people who lack the general cluefulness to explain that clearly, or perhaps even to realize that Socket
in the code could potentially mean anything different from what they think it means.
Apply Occam's Razor: if there is a massively popular third-party library that uses the type names and has documentation that proposes variable names that match the question, proceed as if the OP had explicitly said the type comes from that library. (For example, a Python question with code that says df = pd.DataFrame(...)
should usually have the [pandas]
tag added, and an answer chosen as if OP had explicitly mentioned using Pandas, even if that didn't happen.)
Otherwise, if there's a standard library option that otherwise meet that description, assume that's what's in use. If the language has a well-known naming convention that could imply the missing information, assume that this convention has been used.
In the current case, Socket
is overwhelmingly likely to mean System.Net.Sockets.Socket
, because it's rare that anything else should be called a "socket". And that's a reference type.
With 3000 reputation
If you can already see a system comment proposing one of the questions (or an equivalent) as a duplicate link, propose the other one. Otherwise, choose and propose one of the duplicates according to your best guess, or vote to close as unclear. In the latter case, leave a comment to explain which duplicates you think might apply - this helps others who are reviewing the question, and also directly offers the possible duplicate links to the OP who can consider those answers immediately.
With 50 reputation
Please feel free to leave a comment as long as you're able to. I don't think you'll be able to raise both flags, unless the first one gets declined in the interim. It doesn't really matter which flagging approach you take if there isn't a clear preference; everything will come to the attention of people who have access to the review queues, and a good fraction of them will have 3000+ reputation and will be able to exercise their discretion in close votes.
With 15 reputation
Don't feel bad about not being able to comment. As long as you flag questions that should be closed (and make no mistake: the question you describe should be closed no matter what the additional context is), with a flag that can reasonably be justified, you are doing your part.