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 the answer 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> - Flag the question for moderation attention and ask the for the Question to be marked as Community Wiki as well. Link to the meta post to provide the moderator enough context. 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.