I recently got several downvotes on an answer I provided (the link is for 10k users). I think the answer was spot on and I'd like to get some feedback/discuss why. What's wrong with my answer?
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A downvote is a signal. You can choose to ignore or complain, but normally that won't help anybody. If you get a downvote, I reread my contribution. Sometimes, I did make a mistake and I correct it. Sometimes the question is changed and the answer is not suitable anymore. In that case you can either edit or delete (if it is hopeless). But remember, a downvote does not mean "we don't like you", it does mean "we don't like your post." Unfortunately this also goes for upvotes. |
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It's not an answer to the current question, therefore it should be a comment. When your answer DOES NOT solve a certain question, don't post it as an answer; post it as a comment! Currently flagged as "not an answer"
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DaveBall's comment is spot on:
Your answer is also pretty short for a complex topic and generally useless. You don't provide anything to help the user get started doing what you suggest. I'm also not entirely sure it actually answers the question. You don't address whether brute force algorithms can scale or how to scale them. "Go do this" is rarely an answer, and certainly not for a complex topic. If you can provide a solution to the problem, great, but it should be explained; if a "solution" wouldn't make sense per se, like in this case, then you still need to explain what's involved. You want to help the user understand so that they don't come back tomorrow and post a similar question, having learned nothing. |
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