I'm new to Stack Overflow. I was hoping it would be a way for me to share my experience and help people. I've just spent more than an hour writing an answer, with links to the appropriate MSDN documentation to help the asker.

When I tried to post it I got a message telling me that I needed more experience points to be allowed to post more than two links.

I'm sorry, but this is just daft. My answer needs many links to the appropriate MSDN articles.

So I've dropped it, and I'm wondering whether I should waste any more time on Stack Overflow.

How am I supposed to earn points if I cannot post a good answer to a question?

share|improve this question
The work around is to log out and make an annoymous suggested edit. Then log back in and approve it. – Mysticial Feb 2 at 20:18
3  
Does your answer fully rely on the links, or would it still be self-sufficient without them? If the latter is the case, perhaps post it without them for now. – Bart Feb 2 at 20:19
1  
If the answer is good without the links, you'll be able to add them back in yourself in short order, with no need to make an anonymous edit. – mattdm Feb 2 at 20:42
Debater should also note that once he has 200 points on one sight, he gets an association bonus on others. – artless noise Apr 6 at 23:50

2 Answers

Note that it takes only a very small reputation in order to post multiple links. It's pretty easy for any legit user to cross that threshold, but would be more difficult for someone signing up for throw-away accounts just to spray links around. I agree that it's an annoyance, but it's an annoyance which keeps spammers at bay.

share|improve this answer

My answer needs many links to the appropriate MSDN articles.

Then that's your problem. If your answer needs that many links, then your answer isn't stand-alone. We like answers to be able to speak for themselves; answers that are nothing more than links to the appropriate documentation elsewhere don't qualify.

Links as supplemental information is nice. But your answer should not so totally rely upon them that it's useless without them. You shouldn't need to reference other materials to post a good answer.

share|improve this answer
8  
Abundant links and references to other authoritative sources make a good answer into an excellent answer, especially if the answer is a synthesis of disparate pieces of information. – Josh Caswell Feb 2 at 20:38
@Josh: Perhaps, but the OP said that he needed them for a "good answer". He doesn't. – Nicol Bolas Feb 2 at 20:39
1  
@JoshCaswell Only if that answer would still remain valid without those links. Links can certainly improve an answer, but we want this site to have the answer and not merely point to it. – Bart Feb 2 at 20:40
Yes, Nicol, strictly speaking you're right, the links should be only supporting material, but it's still extremely good material to have. @Bart: I agree -- only if the answer is good without can it be made excellent with. – Josh Caswell Feb 2 at 20:41
Especially when you are new to StackOverflow, links can lend credibility to your answer. Many people look at reputation for guidance on right/wrong and it is human nature to accept the answer of someone you are familiar with. +1 for mattdm; I hope you appreciate irony. – artless noise Apr 6 at 23:45

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged