**Background** I recently posted a question on the main site, and later pointed out by another user that the question has been answered, not once, but a couple times already. Soon, I found a working solution, but I am still following that up to ask a little bit more. **The problem** However, the reason why my question got posted to SO in the first place is that I am obviously not searching well enough in order to pinpoint the exact problem I am trying to find. Specifically, I am using words vastly different from others, due to the lack of knowledge of jargon, or rather, the lack of knowledge on whether this jargon even exists. I am missing duplicates because I have poor searching skills. **Research effort** This is what PlasmaHH mentioned at his answer for [How to ask a good question when I'm not sure what I'm looking for?](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/262527/how-to-ask-a-good-question-when-im-not-sure-what-im-looking-for) They did not elaborate further because they concluded that they are unable to 'look into your head as for why', but for me, I am quite certain that I am unable to search for related items and words. [The community wiki regarding how much research effort is expected also suggested that users should search, like mad.](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/261592/how-much-research-effort-is-expected-of-stack-overflow-users/261593#261593) However, it seems to me that all searching is useless when my lack of skills directs me away from the questions I need to find. I also searched for "stackoverflow research tips" and "stackoverflow search keywords" to no avail. I also visited different URLs but that does not answer my question. - https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/260648/stack-overflow-question-checklist - https://meta.stackoverflow.com/search?q=research+tips - https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/375482/how-do-you-best-research-your-question-before-asking-it-on-so - https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/367302/where-should-i-do-my-research-and-are-low-research-effort-questions-bad - https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/261592/how-much-research-effort-is-expected-of-stack-overflow-users/261593#261593 - https://duckduckgo.com/?q=How+to+make+sure+my+question+is+not+answered%3F&t=ffab&atb=v192-1&ia=web **Other miscellaneous information** I am not a native in English, which is why I am struggling in finding information in English in the first place. However, I want to make sure that in later questions, this same incident of 'duplicate due to insufficient search skill' will NEVER happen. **Question** To summarise my problem: - How, exactly, do I 'rephrase' a question in order to shine light onto my research, for example yielding a documentation, or popping an SO question? - If I am ultimately unable to search for the answer, how should I present my research effort? Specifically, how much is sufficient? Do I need to paste every single link I have opened during my research? If not, how should I filter my work? - Is the format used in this question, that is, the background-problem-research-miscellaneous information-question format, viable for use in the main site? If not, what are the problems lied within it? - Is there a comprehensive or definitive list of what errors have been made by users currently present in the Stack Overflow community? If not, is there a non-definitive list for the matter? If it is still not the case, how could I prevent myself from falling prey into traps of asking a question on SO? - Am I losing much on searching on DuckDuckGo instead of Google?