Brief history of the post:
The user answered a question in C# suggesting a comparison of foo.Count(x)==0
. Another user commented suggesting changing Count
to Any
, because the latter method is quicker.
The original answerer accepted and edited his answer to foo.Any(x)==0
. foo.Any()
returns a boolean. In C# you can't apply the ==
operator to boolean
and int
, so the answer would generate a compile-time error. I suggested an edit to !foo.Any(x)
, which is the correct way to do it. My edit got two negative votes made by people who I don't think have read the answer properly, then was made by another user. Why did this happen?
Link to the review in question: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10119381
Notice the votes say my edit doesn't improve the accuracy of the post, even though the original answer wouldn't even compile.