Here's my take on it:
Are those answers non-answers? Yes, they are indeed non-answers. In fact, if we strictly follow the current definition of "not-an-answer", then only the top 3 answers actually work as self-contained stand-alone answers.
But of course that's not what we are debating. The question is whether to keep the "non-answers".
- Delete them because they are non-answers.
- Keep them because they are potentially useful.
Before I continue, first we need to consider what we are actually dealing with here.
As this is currently the highest voted question on Stackoverflow, not only is it a "flagship" question (as Martin Smith describes), it is also - to some extent - the "face" of Stackoverflow.
Because of this status, it gets a lot of views - many of which are from new or prospective new users.
[copy friendly version] answers:
Currently there are 4 of them. (2 deleted) As Shog9 mentions, the 4 copy-friendly answers are potentially useful to readers who are interested to see the results in their preferred language. Furthermore, having these answers reaffirms the fact that the problem in the question is indeed language-agnostic.
However, these answers tend to encourage more of them. The one with 70+ votes came first. And from that I assume the rest are copy-cats.
So there's a bit of a bike-shed problem here. As they are technically non-answers, it could send the wrong signal to new users that such answers are appropriate in other contexts. Furthermore, too many of them will reduce the SNR as Martin Smith mentions.
caf's answer:
caf's answer is IMO a major contribution to the question. It shows how to detect the problem - something that nobody else had even bothered to mention. Had that answer been posted on the first day, it would likely rank above even WiSaGaN's answer.
But as mentioned by Martin Smith, it would work very well as a separate question with a self-answer.
Personally, I would keep caf's answer. But I'm torn on whether to keep the copy-friendly answers.
If I had to make a decision, I'd stick to the current state. (Keep the good ones, but delete the bad ones.) But if they continue to attract more of these copy-friendly answers, then perhaps we should revisit the issue.