@JohnDibling I think this question boils down to "dupe of question" or "dupe of answer"? I think a question is a dupe of another question if it would have to be answered with the same answer as the other question, even if the user asking isn't aware of that. There's a whole category of such dupes that are really hard to find unless you know the answer. I think linking them without deletion is a good way to deal with those.
Most popularly are the questions: "What is this thing called an initializer list that I don't know what it's called?" and "What's this error that means I should be using typename even though I've never heard of this keyword before so can't search for it?"
And "why is this object definition with an empty initializer () not working? It seems that the compiler is having a vexing time parsing it."
@Charles Exactly. Add "what's the result of ++i + i++?" to that list. We have dozens of each of those. I see no point in not closing them as dupes. Closing as a dupe is, after all, not telling the user who asked "you stupid fuckwit should have found this". It's only saying "there's your answer". Having one perfect answer to link the others to (instead of having dozens of accepted answers in various degrees of quality), was one of the original motivations that got the FAQ idea started.
The trouble with the FAQ answers (IMHO) is they tend to be very long reads and sometimes a fresh simple succinct answer might be more helpful. Of course, any attempt to make a new such answer for anything that involves UB automatically triggers a protracted comment conversation. Sigh.
@sbi: It depends what you mean by successful. It'd be nice if you didn't have to scroll down three pages of long answer to find short answer in the default search order ;-) .