The best answers on Stack Overflow are those that, first and foremost, answer the question to solve the asker's problem. This includes a brief explanation, as well as a code example. If you've done that, and the problem is solved, then you've met the standard. Nice work!
However, Stack Overflow exists not just to tell but also to teach. Therefore, as a professional in your field (or an enthusiast with a lot of skill and knowledge), it's possible you may have noticed a pattern that may lead this asker down the very same path to needing more help on the same type of problem in the future.
If you can provide more value by teaching the asker how to fish (a.k.a offering some tips on how to solve similar problems yourself) then you are just the type of user I enjoy working with the most on Stack Exchange! As long as the additional information doesn't overwhelm the meat and potatoes of the actual answer, I wouldn't remove it, as it is valuable.
As for the "snark", now that you mention it, I do see a little bit of that, but not enough to where it raises any red flags. If you wish to, consider editing it to use slightly different wordings. Take the approach of someone helping a friend. For instance, consider the following edit:
As an aside, these types of problems are something you will run into again. Here are some things you can do to help identify these problems yourself in the future:
- Place a console.log inside of your equalCheck. This shows you the function is only called once.
- Place a console log everywhere you set a value. This shows you whether you are comparing the wrong value.
- Learn what the different types of highlighting means inside JSFiddle and your code editor, as this will show you if the code sections are in the wrong categories.
The trick is to use active rather than passive voice. This looks less condescending and is more reminiscent of the technical language we oftentimes see in documentation. Please feel free to use any of that and put it in your own words.
Perhaps the best value of being a Stack Overflow answerer is the improvements we gain in terms of our own written communications. Hone this skill, and doors will open for you, and people will follow and look up to you as a leader. Hope this helps!
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keys, and edit it into something that conveys the same information without treating someone badly. Best of luck.