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I came across this answer today:

Unit tests for Javacc

The original answer was basically a link-only answer by the book author to the sample code freely available on the book's website.

This answer was a very helpful hint for me, but from the SO guidelines PoV this may be considered as self-promotion, link-only and spam - despite the clarification in the comments.

I wanted to avoid this so I have edited the original answer, making it more obvious that the user is the book author and that the code is available for free. I have also posted a minimal sample code.

Now I'm not quite sure if this is OK. The answer is now X times larger than the original answer (using the material by the same author).

Is it fine or did I go too far with my edit?

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  • 28
    IMO, perfectly valid edit.
    – user2140173
    Nov 18, 2014 at 11:21
  • 7
    Way to go. This is what community is about. Nice one. Nov 18, 2014 at 12:23
  • 2
    No problems with your edit but it is questionable if these Google query type questions should even be answered. My query on a few keywords found an example on the first page in Google... But maybe I am too much of a hardliner.
    – Gullydwarf
    Nov 18, 2014 at 13:14

2 Answers 2

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I'd say that's perfectly reasonable (provided you're sure about the license terms, since you're effectively posting it as Creative Commons) and a very helpful way to resolve a poor answer.

I sometimes wish more users would fix problematic posts rather than instantly resort to a moderator bat signal to delete because community actions/edits scale compared to moderator actions and everybody wins.

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  • 3
    Good point on licensing, I'll check that.
    – lexicore
    Nov 18, 2014 at 10:20
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    I did not manage to find out about the license so I've replaced the code with an analogous simple example.
    – lexicore
    Nov 19, 2014 at 19:22
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Yes, it is fine to edit. As Flexo has mentioned, make sure the license on the code allows it.

However, I would suggest an additional action when you perform such edit: add a comment for the author that in its initial form the post could have been taken as spam. When I've left such comments, I've usually received a positive response. (I see you did leave a comment, but I mention it for future readers of this question and its answers.)

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