I'll answer your basic question here: > Is there a way to close a question with a friendly version of RTFM? And the short answer is: Yes You could create a canonical question with an answer. That question becomes the close as duplicate target for questions that have an answer in the canonical post. Examples of such posts are: - [Reg Ex](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/22937618/reference-what-does-this-regex-mean) - [Null Reference Exception](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4660142/what-is-a-nullreferenceexception-and-how-do-i-fix-it) The concept of so called Community Wiki is also explained in the blog post [Putting the Community back in Wiki](http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2014/04/putting-the-community-back-in-wiki/?cb=1) and I like this quote: > we’ve turned *Community Wiki* back into something that you can choose to use in cases where it lets you work together to create something wonderful ###The Steps towards a canonical question If you have read this far, don't run off now to post your question and answer. 1. [Improve the tag wiki](http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2011/03/redesigned-tags-page/) It could include links to a few frequently asked questions and in the end also the link to the canonical question. This helps your peers to find the question. 1. Have some pre-cooked comments ready to point new users to the tag-wiki. This helps both new and regular users to read that stuff ([despite that software engineers are not good at reading stuff](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/251946/duplicate-questions-versus-rtfm/252046#comment5980_251946)) 2. Organize some regulars in a chat room to gather samples of questions and discuss topics that should go in the canonical question. This helps the sub-community to learn the mechanics 3. [Post on meta your intentions](http://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/228822/regex-reference-and-its-fate). Most important to see if the community at large supports your case. 4. [Make sure a moderator knows about it.](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/266859) This is needed to prepare for the launch so a wiki lock can be applied on the question. 5. Prepare your question and the answer off-line in collaboration with your peers (For the regex post a Github Gist was used) 6. Post your canonical question and answer. - [Mark both as Community Wiki](http://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/11740/what-are-community-wiki-posts) <sub><sub>[to prevent that some members accuse you of gaining rep](http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/253345/what-should-we-do-with-mysql-reserved-keywords-questions#comment15438_253345)</sub></sub> 7. Start closing questions against the canonical question. 8. Improve and update the canonical question and answer. This sums up the process. Does this mean that every question tagged [tag:iTextSharp] can now be closed as a duplicate? No, certainly not. [The other close reasons still apply](http://meta.stackexchange.com/a/215220/158100). Overly broad or opinion based questions should still be closed against that reason. If and only if the question is answered by the canonical question closing as a duplicate is OK.