4:38 AM
@AnnZen The
Socratic method doesn't appear to work, so I'll just explain my point of view on this one.
The primary purpose of duplicates is to serve as signposts for finding the duplicate target (dup-target), which is where, ideally, the answers should be.
That question had a
duplicate-target which
was linked to a total of 4 posts.
Only one of those linked posts was closed as a duplicate of it (i.e. only the question you posted the del-pls
for was a duplicate of the dup-target), so this duplicate-target has only one duplicate. Pretty much by definition, that's not too many duplicates.
[IMO, the total number of questions closed as duplicates of the dup-target needs to be large in order to get to the point where we should be considering if there are "too many", or "enough" duplicates, unless you do analysis of the relative benefits of each duplicate (lots of work).]
So, the question was a duplicate, which might be good, or bad, but it doesn't appear to be unneeded.
The Roomba has two tasks which will delete duplicate questions with no answers:
RemoveDeadQuestions
, which requires the question to be more than 30 days old and have a score < 0. This question was at score==0, so didn't qualify for the RemoveDeadQuestions
Roomba task.
The other task is RemoveAbandonedQuestions
, which requires the question to be > 365 days old, have a score <= 0, less than 2 comments, and a view count <= the age of the question in days times 1.5.
RemoveAbandonedQuestions
is the primary task that is intended to delete duplicate questions which are not considered good. It deletes duplicates which are both not considered good questions in their own right (i.e. score <= 0) and which are not very good duplicates (view count <= the age of the question in days times 1.5; i.e. the questions aren't good signposts to get people to see the dup-target).
With all of 25 views in 2 months, it doesn't look like the question is going to be a good duplicate (i.e. not a good signpost). However, the post had 2 comments, so wouldn't qualify for the RemoveAbandonedQuestions
task. Looking at the comments, one was clearly NLN, so we could raise a NLN flag on that comment. Once that comment is deleted, the question would have qualify for the RemoveAbandonedQuestions
task in 10 months and been deleted by the Roomba.
So, at that point would have been done with the question and could have forgotten about it. It will either become a good duplicate (i.e. a good signpost), or it will be deleted.
So the Roomba would have deleted the question the next time the RemoveDeadQuestions
task is run. That task is run on a weekly basis. So, the question would have been deleted at about 03:00UTC on Saturday (in about 3 days). We are, again, done with the question. The system will clean it up.
To clean up the question, required no delete-votes. It only required getting the question into a state where the system would know that the question is something that should be cleaned up, if it turned out the question should be cleaned up. My personal preference on this would have been just the NLN flag on the one comment. Then the system would deleted the question in 10 months, if the question really turned out to not be a good duplicate (likely).
But, if a post is bad enough that you would delete-vote it, that almost certainly means it's appropriate to downvote that post, which may result in the post being deleted by the Roomba. Once the question qualifies to be deleted by the Roomba, unless the question needs to be deleted now, because it's causing harm in some way, there's no longer a need to spend a rare an precious delete-vote on the question.