There are quite a few questions where the answer is the same as the answer to another (generally far more generic) question. A common example is a Java question where the OP is reporting some malfunction in his code. The root cause ends up being an incorrect String equality comparision, i.e. `if (str == "value")`. I know that it's frowned upon to answer duplicate questions, but the matter is that the OP probably didn't know it was a duplicate when he posted. Indeed, the reference question for this issue (http://stackoverflow.com/questions/513832/how-do-i-compare-strings-in-java) has a title which is precise and correct, but actually *so precise* that I would guess it's difficult to find *unless you already understood the problem!*. (As an aside, I understand that if you actually debugged your code line-by-line you would find the issue, or at least something that "should work, but doesn't" leading to finding the proper question -- but then again, that probably applies for most, if not nearly all, questions on this site). So, what would be a good course of action? 1. Answering the question, explaining the error (adding a link to the reference question). 2. Commenting, explaining the error (adding a link to the reference question). 3. Marking it as duplicate with no further comment. 4. Wait a prudent time for the OP to acknowledge the answer, then mark as duplicate. 5. Any combination of the above? [1]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/258418/flagging-crash-with-stack-trace-questions-as-duplicate-of-sample-question