I occasionally see questions about this common mistake but cannot find an appropriate canonical for the language the question is in.

I have seen: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/273262/16217248

That question asks a canonical for questions about the `if (x != a || x != b ...)` and resulted in one being created: https://stackoverflow.com/q/26337003/16217248

The question also mentions a similar `if (x == a || b || c ...)` problem, for which several canonical questions exist, but only for specific languages:
* Python: https://stackoverflow.com/q/20002503/16217248
* Java: https://stackoverflow.com/q/7604814/16217248
* C++: https://stackoverflow.com/q/15181579/16217248

What should be done about miscellaneous questions caused by the `if (x == a || b || c ...)` problem for languages that do not have a canonical? Here are some ideas that come to mind but might not be good ideas for various reasons:
* Should a new language-agnostic canonical be created for those? This would require a lot of effort and might not be necessary.
* Should they be closed as a duplicate of https://stackoverflow.com/q/26337003/16217248 Though the underlying cause of the problem is different and the other question might need to be modified to include `if (x == a || b || c ...)` cases.
* Should they be closed as a duplicate of a canonical of a different language? This would be confusing as the users directed to them would see solutions not relevant to their use case.
* Should they be closed as *Not reproducible or caused by a typo?* This would not direct the author to an appropriate resource to learn more about the problem unless someone uses a comment.

If I am correct that these ideas are not the best what should be done instead?