Let's say someone asks a question that requires multiple "parts" to an answer (for example, an advantages/disadvantages question). Now let's assume someone answers this question and touches on most points, but is missing a point or two (and let's say his/her answer was picked by the OP as the correct answer). Would it be better to add that additional information as your own answer, or suggest it to the author of the correct answer in a comment? Also, if the answer is a community wiki, is it good etiquette to edit another person's answer and add more info?
migrated from stackoverflow.com Jul 28 '09 at 17:51
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If you have information that further answers the original question, I would submit the information as another answer (instead of adding a comment). That way it comes under the scrutiny of the voting system and allows users to comment directly to your answer. Also, the general etiquette of editing posts seems to lean more towards copy editing; making the post more clear and concise. Correcting grammatical problems or spelling errors is okay. Adding to or changing its meaning is not. |
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