@tripleee I am streamlining duplicates of the canonical stackoverflow.com/questions/240178, currently assisted by a SEDE query. Since the dupe-hammer is "mjolnir", I call this "ragnarok"
@KarlKnechtel I like it! (Though you are missing some crucial Scandinavian characters there; it's Mjölnir and Ragnarök in Swedish and Icelandic, and Mjølnir and Ragnarøk in Danish and Norwegian)
(there are a lot of these inappropriately closed to "how to clone or copy a list", when it would be better not to have the aliasing in the first place. there are also a bunch duped to the mutable default argument canonical; I struggle to understand the reasoning there. I mean it sort of has the same underlying cause but the inferential distance is really far)
I would say, if it can't be fixed without cribbing an existing title, it is. because the point of dupes is to point the right people in the right direction; if the title is bad, it will pull in the wrong people (who have a different problem).
(and if I thought it could be fixed, I would fix it)
@gre_gor Look, questions are supposed to show research but...not sure that's what The Elders of Stack Overflow meant by that. We can see all the research: YouTube, google, W3Schools...
OK, I also just realised - that is a screenshot, pasted in (maybe?) Paint, saved as a file, opened in a browser, and then a full new screenshot taken of the screen showing the original screenshot.
If I find an answer that consists entirely of code that is copied verbatim from the question itself without modification or explanation, do I flag that as Not An Answer, or Plagiarism?
what i meant effectively is, some questions are presented with working code asking why it isn't working... while an answer presenting the working code as an answer is cheeky and unnecessary... it's technically a correct answer,
this obviously isn't a case of that, but the question link wasn't there when i said that ;)
probably just a mistake from someone using the copy to answer bit to edit/play with the snippet