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rene
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You can edit the question or post a new one

What you read in the title is the advice that is given in the post notice when a question gets closed as a duplicate. You might be aware that these post notices got an overhaul 6 to 8 weeks ago.

This an example of a notice an OP sees:

(image taken from https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/394530)

The wording of that post notice was changed with this goal in mind, according to Yaakov Ellis:

The thing is, we previously had language up there recommending that users edit to reopen. And what it led to is...almost no edit, and from those edit, almost no reopens. So we are (intentionally) removing the dangling carrot of the reopen from the language here. Not because adding it is a good temporary band-aid fix. But because we don't think that it accomplished anything positive (and can even be negative). We are aiming for UX changes that will hopefully improve close/reopen. Adding this language back here is not part of our intended solution.

I don't want (and please don't feel invited) to discuss whether this change was communicated effectively to the users that are empowered to cause this notice to appear on a question.

I only want to fix one link in that post notice. And that is the "post a new one" link. Currently that links brings you to

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/ask.

Yes, you're given the no barrier entry to re-ask your exact same question. No questions asked. Leading to trainwrecks I linked to earlier and I'm sure you have seen more on main.

I propose the minimal change that can make this a tiny bit better.
Please link the text "post a new one" to the help centre article How to Ask.

The link text stays the same, no-one will even notice something changed, but an OP that chooses that option is presented with guidance instead of an invite to make the same mistake again.

I realize it is tempting to rewrite all that text but my proposal leaves as little room possible for discussion, mishaps, and interpretation so it can be done in 6 to 8 hours, instead of 6 to 8 weeks. Can you please make this change so our curators don't have to argue with disgruntled users that, rightfully so, claim they followed advice given in the post notice.

rene
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