While working on a project recently, I kept running into an issue "randomly", and so I had begun to compose a question about it to post to SO. (Every time I tried searching for the answer, I couldn't find anything.) Recently, I discovered the answer to this question, so I wanted to post it on SO and self-answer so that anyone else who might have this problem could find the solution too.
As a good StackOverflowan, I searched the site some more to see if this question had been asked before. This time I found a similar question, so I was going to just answer that one instead.
However, the problem is that the only reason I found this question is that I already knew the answer. In all the searches I did before I figured out the answer, I didn't find this question. Thus, I'm concerned that future StackOverflowans that have this problem won't be able to find my answer.
In addition, I don't think the question is very clear, and it doesn't include an MCVE. (In fact, the included code fails both the Minimal and Complete tests.)
I would edit the question, but that would mean modifying much of the code, which reviewers tend to look down upon. Also, I'm not completely sure that this question is the same issue that I had, so I don't want to turn it into something else by accident.
So these are what I see as my options:
- Post my answer on the original question, perhaps with a note that the question should be cleaned up, and the code reduced to an MCVE.
- Post a new question, with better keywords and an MCVE, and answer my own question. I could then mark the original question as a duplicate of mine.
What should I do?