I posted [a question][1] today, attempting to get help debugging a problem for which the root cause wasn't clear. A few hours of debugging later, I found the root cause, which turned out to be something already covered by another Stack Overflow question, although [my answer][2] differs from the accepted answer. I wasn't sure what I should do with my original question. Should I answer it, referring to the answer I provided in the other question? Should I just outright delete it? Or should I flag my own question as a duplicate? I searched Meta, and found [this question][3] which suggested I should flag my own question as a duplicate. That's all well and good, but since I know my question should be closed as a duplicate, should it really need 4 additional votes to close? Would it make sense to have questions closed as duplicates immediately, if the person voting to close is the person that created the question? **Edit** Looks like this functionality is already available, although indirectly. After I flagged my question as a duplicate, I had to reload the page. Once I did, I got a notice telling me that the question might already have an answer, with a button that said something along the lines of "this was the answer!". Given I have the ability to act independently to close my own question as a duplicate (by flagging it, reloading the page, and clicking the button), should this just happen immediately when I flag my own question? Or, should the UI show the button immediately? [1]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50491038/msbuild-in-appveyor-vm-doesnt-seem-to-be-building-a-new-project-in-my-c-sharp-s [2]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8495534/visual-studio-project-not-being-built-when-i-build-solution-from-msbuild/50495253#50495253 [3]: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/307615/should-i-post-a-question-that-im-going-to-immediately-close-as-a-duplicate