What to Do, Part I: Comment
Always remember that you can leave comments. The following text, for example, explains the problem and sometimes prompts authors to improve their answers:
While this may answer the question, it is better to provide the actual information here and not just a link. Link-only answers are not considered good answers and will probably be deleted.
What to Do, Part II: Edit, If Appropriate
If you have 2000 reputation points and can edit the post without changing its meaning, please do so. For example, if somebody posts this as an answer:
I posted a gist with an example regex to do this: see https://gist.github.com/foo/bar
and the gist contains nothing more than the regex, you could just add the regex to the answer.
Be careful with this approach, though! Do not simply copy and paste other people's work, and do not do anything that gives the answer a new or totally different meaning. It's best to let the post's author do any major surgery. And it's a bad idea to do this until you have a fair amount of experience editing posts and reviewing edits to learn what is appropriate.
What to Do, Part III: Flag It
Flag it as very low quality (VLQ)1 and, assuming the author hasn't fixed it by the time we see the flag, the mods will nuke it.
The Rationale Behind Purging these Answers
There's not much difference between these examples, which are all very common and very terrible:
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I just did this in my project. You can see it here: https://github.com/foo/bar
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I just did this in my project and wrote about it on my blog. You can see it here: https://example.com/how-to-solve-some-problem
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Dude! [Quora/Reddit/Facebook/whatever] has the most amazing post about this. You can see it here: https://example.com/start-of-another-rabbit-trail
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[The example you shared:] I have made a sample application with rounded listview here: GitHub: AndroidListViewRoundedCorner [image omitted]
None of these are useful answers. Links break, libraries go offline, and, at best, link-only answers tend to send the OP down a rabbit trail. As you said, it usually takes a lot of reading and digging through other material to figure out if the link is helpful at all. This is especially true with a link to a repository, which requires the user to wade through the readme and the source to figure out:
- Is this even relevant?
- Is it helpful?
- Is it correct?
- Is it bug-free?
- Is it actively maintained?
- What are the odds that it will suddenly go offline?
- Is the code safe or possibly malicious?
- Is the license one I can accept?
- How do I use it?
- Is it performant?
- Can I just find the answer I want, like the name of whatever method I'm looking for, without adding another dependency to my project?
In short, a link to a repo—without more—is not very helpful at all.
As explained in the help center article on how to answer questions,
Provide context for links
Links to external resources are encouraged, but please add context around the link so your fellow users will have some idea what it is and why it’s there. Always quote the most relevant part of an important link, in case the target site is unreachable or goes permanently offline.
Refer to this classic post for more discussion of this topic: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?.
1 The VLQ flag is only available for posts from the last seven days. If the post is older than that, you can use a Not An Answer (NAA) flag if the post really doesn't even try to answer the question, or use a custom flag. NAA is only appropriate if you literally have no clue what the author is suggesting is the answer to the question. Otherwise, stick with VLQ (if available) or a custom flag.