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Too many times I have read a question and gone away to write and test a solution, only to come back to find that the question has been suspended, usually because it is unclear what you're asking or too broad

The problem is often that the post has been made by a non-native English speaker, so I will also have spent a while untangling the language to establish the real question, and rewriting and editing the OP's original words

While I can understand people's frustration in seeing a badly-written question from someone who understands only that Stack Overflow will fix anything, I don't see an advantage to wasting an hour or so's work by prohibiting me from posting the solution that I have created

Yes, I can vote to reopen a question, but unlike the blanket close privilege that I have on duplicate questions, I still need others to agree with me that it should be reopened

Given Stack Overflow's renowned failure to properly resurrect old posts, even if the question is changed beyond all recognition, I suggest that it should be possible to post a solution to any suspended post. After all, by insurrection I may post anything as an edit to the question or, god forbid, as a sequence of comments

What is this prohibition aiming to achieve? Can it be abolished?

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5 Answers 5

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The problem is often that the post has been made by a non-native English speaker, so I will also have spent a while untangling the language to establish the real question, and rewriting and editing the OP's original words

That's actually really great - Questions that get edited after being put on hold (the process you call here "suspended") get pushed into the Reopen queue, where 3000+ rep users can determine whether the question now meets the quality standards of the site - and when they conclude that it does it will get reopened.

Yes, I can vote to reopen a question, but unlike the blanket close privilege that I have on duplicate questions, I still need others to agree with me that it should be reopened

And that's good, because we all curate this site together, so that judgement call isn't yours alone to make. It's barely anyone's, only moderators and Stack Exchange employees can do that. And from what I hear and from what the theory of moderation says, even the people who can do that are reluctant to do it unless its a fringe case. Generally speaking, the curation of this site is by most fundamental design a team effort - of everyone.

Given Stack Overflow's renowned failure to properly resurrect old posts, even if the question is changed beyond all recognition, I suggest that it should be possible to post a solution to any suspended post. After all, by insurrection I may post anything as an edit to the question or, god forbid, as a sequence of comments

I never felt that, and I'm not sure this is supported by evidence; can you maybe provide some concrete examples? We can fix all of this retroactively when it turns out to be legitimately wrongly closed.

To be clear: If you could answer any closed question, then the facility of closing a question would be all but irrelevant. The primary purpose of closing a question is to stop it from receiving (mostly poorly thought out or crapshoot) answers while its problems are being fixed.

What is this prohibition aiming to achieve? Can it be abolished?

It's one of our primary quality control mechanisms. Stack Exchange and Stack Overflow in particular get loads of really, really bad questions. Not necessarily questions that nobody can crank out a half-related boilerplate answer to, but questions that should never be answered. Remember the primary purpose of this is to create a repository of knowledge, not to satisfy the instant gratification demands of every last user.

In conclusion: I don't think you should be able to answer closed questions - they're closed for a reason. If you really care that much about a closed question, get it reopened.

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    @Borodin Your assertion that the statement is false doesn't make it false. The reopen queue and how its fed is a well established mechanism of the site. The fact that you apparently haven't made edits significant enough to merit the reopening of a question (or haven't noticed the subsequent reopening, which is more likely) doesn't infer your assertion.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:01
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    And that's the problem with SO. The site is flooded with so much crap that a 90k user hasn't seen a single good quality question and therefore doesn't know what they look like.
    – Mysticial
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:02
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    @Borodin You are asking for one of our two primary curation mechanisms to be abolished because you think your own judgement at what a question should be here should supercede a community consensus. I don't think that that will ever come to pass, as it is completly contrary to the fundamental purpose of this site.
    – Magisch
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:05
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    @Borodin The fact that people disagree (strongly) with your proposal doesn't mean they're ignoring you. If this question had no answers, votes, or comments, that would be ignoring you. Lots of people posting rather engaged feedback on your proposal is literally the opposite of being ignored.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:33
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    @Servy: I'm sorry, I meant that I'm always met with people who are hugely invested in SO and the way things are. And by "ignored" I mean that I don't have a single upvote, even for a comment that goes along with what seems to be the prevalent philosophy. Meanwhile, familiar names are getting many upvotes just for wearing the SO badge. This is no democracy
    – Borodin
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:37
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    @Borodin "It's bizarre how there are so many ways in which SO seems broken, and requires me to dig into the inner workings to fathom what some things mean." Um.... The help center had this listed under "Asking", third link. Would've helped you a lot with this question of yours, and no "digging" required. Just reading a help center page. As for SO seeming "broken", you'll have to be more detailed because most of us here don't see any issues. (GIve us some proof of problems, then we'll be able to see them.)
    – Kendra
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:39
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    @Borodin Apologies if that hasn't come through clearly yet, but if you propose a feature change, you need broad community support, and to get that, you need to identify what you percieve the issue to be, identify what you would do to fix it, and provide arguments how your solution would have a positive impact on the site. The process of changing things on SO is slow and every feature has to be very deliberately vetted before being implemented.
    – Magisch
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:45
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    @Borodin Why does it surprise you that people like the site the way that it is? Were you expecting everyone on the site to hate the way everything works? Did you consider the possibility that people are in support of question closure not being removed because they actually like the concept of questions being closed when they're unanswerable (or don't belong here) rather than supporting it purely because that's how the site works? If everyone using the site was fundamentally opposed to the sites core features, they wouldn't all be here using the site.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 20:01
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    @Borodin You think that abolishing question closure is a minor change that won't affect anyone's experience on the site? That's just nonsense and I wonder why you wrote it.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 20:23
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    @Kendra: Ah so that is your banner! Do you have any web designers on your team? At the focus of the page I see my subject line with [on hold] at the end. That doesn't sound so bad, although deleted would make me sit up. Why should I read through the question? I wrote it and I know what's there. If I stray to that yellow panel after my question, the biggest letters are telling me off, followed by links to the profiles of all those people better than me who voted to close my question. In smaller text there's stuff that amounts to please see your probation officer once a week So I go away
    – Borodin
    Jun 15, 2016 at 20:25
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    @Borodin No, technically you just wanted to make question closure not actually prevent answers, which is it's primary purpose, resulting in question closure doing virtually nothing meaningful. If you're going to have question closure not actually do anything, then you might as well just not have it. Saying that you want questions to still get closed, but have question closure not do anything doesn't change my previous point; that's still not at all a minor change, and it's absolutely going to affect the experience of the users here.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 20:32
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    @Borodin You were asserting that everyone's rejecting your proposal purely because it's a change from the status quo, rather than because they actually disagreed with it. I was asserting that people are rejecting your proposal because they actually disagree with it, and feel that it would make the site worse to implement it.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 20:33
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    @Borodin So you're upset that more people didn't post answers all saying the same thing? Why would seeing more answers saying the same thing help you?
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 20:40
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    @Borodin like on the main site: if i see an answer that is virtually what i would say/do, i upvote it. Posting my own answer isn't necessary, nor is commenting... At least until i have something to say. What do you prefer, people upvoting the status quo comments, or having 14 different users comment the same things to you? (Id like to also take a second to remind everyone to stay civil here? Attacks on people's grammar is just childish and helps no one...)
    – Patrice
    Jun 15, 2016 at 20:46
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I don't really hate this idea. Closing and reopening has rather a lot of overhead right now, and it'd be nice if folks with some experience could just blow past it. Got a gold badge in Perl? Fine, answer any question you want. If it's too bad, it'll end up deleted anyway, along with your answer, so there's some motivation to fix things too.

The easiest way to implement this would be to extend the current gold badge "hammer" privileges to all close reasons, thus allowing knowledgeable users to close and reopen whatever they want without resistance. Figuring out how to do that without opening the door to abuse is left to be determined.

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  • I think this could be useful if it was based on the top participants of a given tag. Low traffic tags suffer from some large delay between closing/opening. But if you're in like java or php, pretty much every question is gonna get its fair shake - imo.
    – Magisch
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:20
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    I would like that closed, <3 scored questions are deleted even if the answer is upvoted/accepted. The answer & edit badges doesn't seems to be a very strong stimulator, but this one is better.
    – Braiam
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:21
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    If we're going to let gold badgers reopen any question, if would be nice to require that they edit the post first, since 5 other people felt that it wasn't clear or up to standards. Basically, you'd have to edit to put it in the reopen queue before you could reopen it. Duplicate reopening seems like a special case, since it's often used to retarget the dupe.
    – davidism
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:24
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    There is also the issue that you can get a gold badge in a popular tag without knowing all that much about the technology itself. Take me as an example. If I was less scrupulous and answered more c homework dumps, I could get the gold badge in some time (maybe a year or two or some more) without becoming any better at the actual coding. Under your system that would then grant me privileges to decide on the fate of questions alone. Our current process alleviates that by requiring a 5 vote consensus.
    – Magisch
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:25
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    I like this idea, it would essentially deputize a very large amount of users who are dedicated to the site and sometimes (as seen by the OP here) feel like their voice or opinions have no weight. As far as the abuse metrics, I agree that is a valid concern, but I think that the overall weight of these users who are already vested in the interests of the site being applied even stronger would only be a benefit.
    – Travis J
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:25
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    Looking at making it easier for top users to get a question reopened would be something I'm perfectly okay with, but letting such users answer a question while keeping it closed seems very wrong. Either it's appropriate for the question to be answered, in which case the question should be reopened for anyone to answer, or it isn't, and it should remain closed. Letting only certain people answer is rather contrary to the idea of a question being closed.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:26
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    That's just a detail, @Servy. If you have the ability to instantly reopen any question in your area of expertise, then you have the ability to answer closed questions... The fact that they're not closed after you've done so is inconsequential to your goals. It does mean that you can't do it twice, but then again very few people answer questions twice anyway.
    – Shog9
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:28
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    @Shog9 It doesn't matter to you, as an answerer. It matters significantly to others who comes along later to see the question, and possibly answer it. It also matters to the roomba, it affects the question author's post-ban standing, it affects the impression of future readers as to whether this question is an appropriate question or not, etc. Unless you're asserting that if you gave these users binding close-reopen votes you'd find lots of people reopening such questions, answering them, and then re-closing them.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:30
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    @Servy - I thought the point of his comment was that by answering you implicitly reopen the question, thereby allowing other users to also answer if they were so inclined making it fair.
    – Travis J
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:31
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    That might happen, @Servy... Although by doing so you'd essentially be nominating your own answer for deletion, so I don't know if it'd be as common as we might fear. Truth is, we had a lot of concerns about abuse when implementing the dup-hammer that mostly didn't play out in practice; turns out folks with gold badges tend to be fairly invested in the site.
    – Shog9
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:34
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    @TravisJ The statement that it's "inconsequential" as to whether or not the question is closed after the answer is posted lead me to believe Shog didn't care either way, rather than that he felt it was important that such a user posting an answer would implicitly reopen the question. If I'm misreading it, I'd be quite glad to be corrected.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:36
  • @Servy "The fact that they're not closed after you've done so is inconsequential to your goals." I'm not sure what you read there, but it reads to me as "As the answerer, you're not going to care that the question's now opened since you've answered it." as in, once you answer the question it'll be opened.
    – Kendra
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:43
  • @Kendra The fact that an answerer wouldn't care if it's open or not doesn't imply that it would be opened. Shog, if you care to clarify, I'd appreciate it.
    – Servy
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:50
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    @Shog9 Does your data wizardry indicate that you could afford that amount of trust to gold badge holders reliably? I'm afraid that some of them don't agree with the goals of the site in almost entirety and giving them tools with such impact could be harmful.
    – Magisch
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:59
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    @Shog9 "to extend the current gold badge "hammer" privileges to all close reasons" I've been considering several times to ask for a feature to extend the mjölnir powers, but certainly not for all close reasons only those that are really related to the (language) tag (e.g. questions asking for "Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?")" or "This question was caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced or a simple typographical error."). Jun 15, 2016 at 20:28
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Closure (and on hold by relation) provide a path for removing and hiding questions that do not belong at Stack Overflow. Either because they are off topic, or because they do not align with the outlook of the site.

Part of that path is to prevent answers. This both discourages questions which are not a good fit here as well as saves the time of users who are answering the question from wasting their time on a post that will be removed or hidden.

I feel the latter part of this is what has affected you here, and that is unfortunate. No one likes to waste their time, and that is why so many efforts have been made to close questions faster thus giving an earlier signal to not answer them. The unfortunate side effect of not being effective enough at closing down questions deserving of closure is that often user's time is wasted.

With the drive to protect quality and at least attempt to not be a quantity over quality site, sometimes there are posts which had deserved a chance but did not get one. While there is the FGITW for answering, there is also the same mentality for closing; and just like sometimes answering quickly gets it wrong, closing quickly can also get it wrong.

One such suggestion that I have seen to possibly alleviate this would be to also weigh in a post's score with the closure metric - but I believe that would simply make these types of posts closed ever faster.

In such a situation as you find yourself in now, where you have spent a considerable amount of time researching and are clearly a knowledgeable person, instead of reflecting on the downsides of the system take your research and post it so that others may find it.

As you indicate with regards to editing, you are aware of the underlying issue. I believe this places you in a far better position to frame the problem, and as a result I would suggest creating a canonical post for that situation. This would allow you to eloquently frame the problem while at the same time providing the research that you have already gathered. It will create a well informed post that can stand the test of time, and also you may leave it as a link in a comment to the closed post if you wish in order to provide a path of information for the OP.

Creating a canonical is the best of both worlds option here in my opinion, and if the situation does not deserve this type of approach, perhaps the question should just remain closed and left for removal as was its original path.

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    "saves the time of users who are answering the question from wasting their time on a post that will be removed or hidden." - maybe the screen should start shaking more furiously for every closevote that is cast while you are typing an answer, as to let you know something bad is about to happen.
    – CodeCaster
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:24
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    @CodeCaster - And perhaps a little smoke can start to appear, that leads to crinkling and then like an all out fire in the corner that slowly burns the page away?
    – Travis J
    Jun 15, 2016 at 19:26
0

I'd tend to favor this, not so much because saving such a question is necessarily worthwhile, but to encourage better answers.

On several occasions I've put quite a bit of time into writing (what I thought was) a really good answer, then tried to post the answer, and couldn't because the question had been closed. Some of those questions probably were marginal, but probably would have been acceptable if coupled with really good answers. Others honestly were good questions, but were (apparently) a bit beyond the understanding of most of the readers (well, at least 5 of them, anyway).

In any case, it seems to me that this has exactly the opposite of the effect we (should) want. Putting lots of effort into writing great answers is punished. Instead, it encourages writing short answers to simple questions with a minimum of thought.

As an aside: this is also one of the reasons the rep cap is such a lousy idea. Essentially every user close to the top of the rep ladder hits the rep cap nearly ever day--therefore, differences in reputation are determined almost exclusively by the number of answers accepted. So, for anybody who cares about reputation even slightly, the behavior that's encouraged is to produce a large number of fairly decent answers, rather than a few really great answers1.


1. And yes, a played that game well enough for long enough to speak from experience about this. At one time I was in the top 30 (or so) users by rep. I've since dropped quite a bit, largely because I decided to concentrate on making contributions I thought were more meaningful and useful.

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  • Putting lots of effort into writing great answers is punished Indeed! Others honestly were good questions, but were (apparently) a bit beyond the understanding of most of the readers (well, at least 5 of them, anyway). Makes me want to wish for an alternative to SO Sep 14, 2021 at 2:22
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While the close system often works well, and many suspended or closed questions actually are unclear and/or unanswerable in their current state, this isn't always true. Sometimes, in rare cases, a question may be unclear to some people, but be perfectly clear to others. In these cases, it would be useful to allow people who can understand the question to post answers, because those answers could potentially help make the question itself clearer.

To this end, a possible solution would be to create a "potentially unclear" or "subjectively unclear" suspend reason, which has a special mechanism attached:

  • If a question is marked as potentially unclear, then users are allowed to answer it. However, this answer will not be shown immediately. Instead, whenever a potentially unclear question is edited OR answered, it is placed in the reopen queue. If reviewers feel that this answer makes the question clear, or at the very least that the answer could plausibly be valid for what the question appears to be trying to ask, then they can reopen the question, at which case the answer will go through and be posted.
  • If a user answers a potentially unclear question, they will receive a prompt similar to:

    "You appear to understand what this question is asking. Would you like to edit it for clarity?"

    If they choose to do so, this would make it more likely that the question is reopened, due to other users actually being able to understand what was being asked.

Note that if a "potentially unclear" question is answered and put on the reopen queue, that the answer would only be posted if people vote to reopen the question. If they vote for it to remain closed, the answer would be discarded. This system would thus act as a supplement to the current "edit, then we vote on whether to reopen" system, for cases where people aren't entirely sure that editing is necessary for the question to be understandable.

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    or... they could, you know, edit it to be more clear, get it reopened, and then answer it. Isn't there even a badge that promotes this?
    – Kevin B
    Oct 20, 2016 at 18:26
  • @KevinB The problem with that is that often, these fringe cases are often complex, and writing a good answer takes a while. And during the time spent answering, the question will most likely have been closed. This idea is mainly designed to counter that, by letting the person who actually did understand it well enough to answer give a significant amount of input on it (and thus influence others' understanding of it, ideally for the better), while also prompting them to make the question clearer for those of us that couldn't tell what it means. Oct 20, 2016 at 18:32
  • Also, the term "potentially unclear" is to indicate that the people who voted it closed don't understand it themselves, but feel that others would be able understand it enough to answer it without it having to be edited first. This contrasts with the normal "unclear", which indicates that the people who voted it closed don't understand it, and don't feel that it can be understood well enough to answer in its current state. Oct 20, 2016 at 18:35
  • right, but, the issue is that these.. "unclear" questions are often duplicates, but they're just so unclear that they can't be accurately closed as such. closing them and preventing answers saves the time of the answerer.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 20, 2016 at 18:37
  • @KevinB Then they would be marked as "unclear", and closed normally. I'm not suggesting that we replace "unclear" as a close reason, but rather that we add an additional reason that basically means "We think this is unclear, but aren't entirely sure." It would only be used in cases where it's at least plausible that the question would be understandable to some users, and where the question doesn't appear to be a duplicate. Oct 20, 2016 at 18:42
  • .... who would use that... if the question is unclear, it's unclear... what close reason would it replace?
    – Kevin B
    Oct 20, 2016 at 18:42
  • @KevinB I imagine it would mainly be used in extremely complex cases, or ones where the post is horribly mangled, but appears to be trying to ask a valid question. One case that definitely comes to mind is the one in the OP's second paragraph, where a post is made by a non-native English speaker, and users have to spend time untangling the Engrish to figure out what they actually mean. These are in and of themselves unclear, but may very well be entirely answerable if someone is able to piece together the actual question. Oct 20, 2016 at 18:48
  • Thankfully we have this wonderful "on hold" grace period.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 20, 2016 at 18:49
  • @KevinB Good point, I forgot about that. Oct 20, 2016 at 18:50
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    unfortunately it doesn't solve the problem entirely though, you can't post answers during the grace period (which I think should remain.) I like shog's idea related to simply giving the power users more moderation power.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 20, 2016 at 18:54
  • Part of the reasoning for this idea was that if the "potentially unclear" question still isn't considered to be clear, even after someone answers, then their answer won't be posted, and the question would remain closed. It would thus act as a supplement to the current "edit, then we vote on whether to reopen" system, for cases where people aren't entirely sure that editing is necessary for the question to be understandable. Not sure if this would be worth the effort to implement, though. Oct 20, 2016 at 19:03
  • Edited that in, since I don't think I made it clear. Oct 20, 2016 at 19:07
  • tbh i didn't read the whole answer before responding, didn't realize you were suggesting a new close reason. Maybe... if the user attempts to answer a question that is closed as 'unclear' they get said prompt.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 20, 2016 at 19:10
  • @KevinB That's a pretty good idea, actually. It would likely be difficult to determine what posts are unclear to everyone, and which are unclear, but still make sense to some users, meaning that a "potentially unclear" close reason would likely be hard to use properly; I didn't really think about that when suggesting this, though. Oct 20, 2016 at 19:20
  • Modifying the system so that if someone attempts to answer a closed-as-unclear question, they're prompted to edit the question for clarity, would actually work pretty well with that badge you mentioned; the system could possibly even be modified to cache their answer, and post it if the question is reopened or discard it if it isn't. [In this case, if they don't edit it for clarity, the answer probably just wouldn't go through at all, as normal for closed questions.] Oct 20, 2016 at 19:21

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