Every once in a while, which some regularity, somebody on SO completely misreads a question (or is just generally confused or insane or on drugs, or whatever) and posts an answer that has absolutely nothing to do with the question. If you've been on SO for a while, you've probably seen something like this — a user asks:
Is
i += f(++i);
undefined behavior in C++?
and someone responds:
You need to use jQuery.click() on the checkbox.
Also with some regularity, these "answers" often get flagged as Not An Answer. Sometimes this works, and the answers get deleted in the Low Quality Posts review queue (or by a ♦ mod going above and beyond their duty), but more often than not, such flags get declined with a terse message that "a moderator reviewed your flag, but found no evidence to support it", or perhaps that "flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer".
Also quite regularly, the confused flagger then posts on Meta asking why the hell their flag got declined:
- Sanity check on NAA flag?
- Irrelevant, but not incorrect answer
- Why was my last flag declined?
- Why was this 'not an answer' flag declined?
- Disputed not an answer flags
- NAA-flag was disputed
- Does answering the wrong question make an answer not an answer?
- Reasons for declined not-an-answer flag
- Is this really an answer?
- Why was my "not an answer" flag declined as having no evidence?
- ...et cetera, et cetera, et cetera
In many of these cases, the users involved seem to have chosen the NAA flag based on the flag description, which currently says (emphasis mine):
This was posted as an answer, but it does not attempt to answer the question. It should possibly be an edit, a comment, another question, or deleted altogether.
For a few examples, see these highly upvoted comments.
The problem is that, even though it has been clearly explained on Meta several times that mods do not (automatically) see the question when going through NAA flags, and will therefore tend to reject any flags for answers the look like they're answering some question, this is not obvious from the flag description at all. Since most users will never see those Meta posts unless they're pointed to them, there will always be people flagging answers as NAA because they answer some other question than what was asked.
That is, unless we change the flag description. There have been extensive proposals for overhauling the NAA flags before, but I'd like to propose just a very simple, almost trivial change: replace "the question" with "a question" (and maybe "does not attempt" with "does not look like an attempt").
The new NAA flag description would thus read (changes in bold):
This was posted as an answer, but it does not look like an attempt to answer a question. It should possibly be an edit, a comment, another question, or deleted altogether.
This should bring the flag description much better in line with how NAA flags are actually being handled by mods.
Of course, there is a risk that this could swing too far in the other direction — for example, if the OP was asked in a comment to clarify their question, and mistakenly posted their clarification as an answer, a new flagger might perhaps think that such an "answer" doesn't qualify for an NAA flag under this new description (because it does answer the question posed in the comment). That said, I don't think this is a serious issue:
We have a lot of flaggers, and the experienced ones among them will still know that it qualifies. It's probably better for the less experienced ones to flag slightly too little than too much.
If it's obvious that the answer doesn't belong here (as should be the case for real NAA flags), most users will find some way of reporting it. They might occasionally end up flagging such answers as VLQ, or as "other", but that has little effect on the eventual outcome.
If someone is entirely deterred from flagging a non-answer because of this change, and even if no-one else comes along to flag it, it will still likely get downvoted (or at least will not get upvoted), pushing it below actual answers. If it doesn't get flagged or downvoted at all, that probably means that the whole thread is tumbleweed territory, anyway (and likely to be eventually cleaned away by the roomba).
In the end, it's just a few words in an obscure dialog that most SO users will never even see. But I think this change would save a few of those users some frustration and headache, and save us from having to re-hash this issue on Meta quite so often.
jQuery().is()
.