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Should I ask a question I know the answer to?
I have a log of problems I've encountered over the years with the solution at the particular time. What's the etiquette for posting them and posting the answer myself?
I have a log of problems I've encountered over the years with the solution at the particular time. What's the etiquette for posting them and posting the answer myself? | |||||
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Yes, this is actually encouraged. Check the FAQ. | |||||||||
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All I ask is this - let the community provide answers before you post yours. This way you can get different perspectives (maybe ones you haven't even thought of). It's annoying to see an incredibly detailed answer posted by the questioner two seconds after the question was posted. As it's hard to top that kind of answer, most of us don't even try. | |||||
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I have asked the same thing in a slightly different form here. Here is the verbatim answer from Andrew Johnson:
However, what I found with my personnal experience is that some people will be displeased if:
you wait before answering
Either way, someone will be unhappy... Of course, you could always mark your answers community owned. This way, anybody (with reasonable karma) would be free to edit the answer and improve it. That is after all the whole point for SO. | |||||
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I think you should ask them as if they were a problem you had, then answer it, and allow for other people to contribute with their own (hopefully different) answers. This allows for viewing a problem from different angles, should the question permit it. | |||
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I've seen this done both ways, as a simple post explaining an answer and tagged with not-a-question, also as a question answered separately by the user. I get the feeling the latter is the preferred way. | |||
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yes. The whole point is collaborative sharing. I see the best part is you share your knowledge (I am looking to do the same thing myself) and it allows other to learn. Other people may also refine or evolve your answers in a way that you can expand your knowledge, even in an area you may feel exceptionally experienced. | |||
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