Scenario
It seem like a pretty common scenario when OP ask a question of a type
"How do you I achieve this certain result using a very bad/ frowned upon practice"
It usually gets a response in comments of type
"Why use this very bad/ frowned upon practice, just do this simple/efficient solution"
OPs response
"Yeah, I know I can achieve it this way, but I insist on the very bad/ frowned upon practice because [it is more readable/fits my code better/etc.]"
What usually happens next, is 5-10 newly registered users post ridiculously awful answers that fit the description of the question and actually meet the OP's "standards".
Use Case
Here's a recent example (let's try avoiding Meta effects for once, shall we?)
I'm not going to talk in too much detail regarding what's so wrong in OP's preferred practice as most of you haven't even heard of R, but one could solve the question using a one-liner such as df[10:15, c('a','d')]
which is how it should be solved according to any R tutorial I'm aware of. Now look at the proposed answers there.
Possible solutions
Now my doubts are:
- Put the question on hold until OP specifies a good enough reason regarding the why they are looking for such a solution
- Downvote or not the answers which are both terrible (well, most of them) but actually answer the question
- Leave it as is and not to force OP/Answers to follow the commonly accepted practices and mind my own business
My current solution
Is comment > Close Vote > don't downvote neither the question or the answers (though I feel like they can be very harmful for future readers).
Thoughts?
Update: Two of the answers have been deleted by the community since this was posted, but this is not so relevant to the question itself.
using namespace std;
in all C++ programs