Basically, I agree with you. And let me just explain to clarify what do I mean by that.
I think you should accept an answer when you think that:
- It is sufficiently good - correctly identifying and addressing your need, and
- It is a working solution for you - not flawed - at some point of time.
There is no need to bother the community by leaving your questions well-answered but not having an accepted answer when you already think that an answer among them is good enough (or, using your term, suitable) for you. Accept the answer, and don't wait for the best.
It doesn't mean that you should accept any working solution or the
first working solution. No. It also doesn't mean that you cannot wait
longer. No. It only means that, after you carefully judge, when one of
the answers is good enough to be accepted, then you should accept
it.
Thus, the time factor (how long you got to wait) is irrelevant. It
is the quality of the answer that matters. If there is no
sufficiently good answer till eternity then your question will remain
there without an accepted answer till eternity too.
Also, according to the SO guidance on accepting an answer:
Accepting an answer is not meant to be a definitive and final
statement indicating that the question has now been answered
perfectly. It simply means that the author received an answer that
worked for him or her personally, but not every user comes back to
accept an answer, and of those who do, they may not change the
accepted answer if a newer, better answer comes along later.
Thus, it is clear that accepting an answer is a personal and timely decision.
Now, whether at some point later you get a fitter answer or not and what you do with it is of separate issue.
What do we do if we get/find better answer later on?
I have just recently encountered this problem and I think the answer given by Cody Gray there is quite useful to help us making decisions.
In my case, I ended up accepting the answer and choose not to change it - although better answer is present since the answer happens to work for me and I implemented it personally at some point - although a day later what happen was:
- I realized that there was a better answer elsewhere, and
- There was someone else who gave me an answer the way I wanted
(after I have accepted an answer).
- I changed the way I implemented the solution in my project into even a different - improved way of all the answers which are not so proper to be put in SO anyway.
This is because:
- Logically, there is still possibility that the best solution may even change in the future as it often happens. Be it a day or couple of years later does not make any difference - the best answer changes and not always be posted. Accepting a working solution early because of our lack of knowledge at the present + inability to tell the future isn't sinful at all.
The solution given has been working at some point and you think that it is good enough before a couple of months or years later a better solution comes and the new answer is of separate issue:
- If the solution is truly better, the community will come and vote it up
- At that point, you may (if you have enough reputation) unaccept the current answer and accept the better answer.
- Or, if you don't feel good to unaccept the answr for one reason or another, you could simply upvote the better answer or giving bounty to show you gratitude.
- Or, you could even make your own better answer and post it (in case you really make better answer).
In all these, the bottom line is,
Accepting an answer and what you do when you receive better answer are
two different issues.
IMHO, as long as the answer is sufficiently good and is working for you at some point: don't wait, just accept it. Don't wait for the best.
(Last note: about waiting, it may be a little different if the
question is on Meta discussion, however, since the answer cannot be
easily judged as "working or not working". Normally, on Meta question
- especially on discussion topic, though I think an answer is good enough, I will wait for a couple of days before accepting an answer, waiting for wider responses for community
- since it is a
discussion anyway.)