• How does accepting an answer work?
  • When should I do it?
  • Why can't I accept my own answers right away?
  • Which answer should I accept?

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221  
It would be ironic if this question didn't have an accepted answer. – JohnB Feb 4 '11 at 18:29
33  
A little too ironic, I really do think – bobobobo Oct 1 '11 at 16:44
22  
It's like raaaa-ya-aaain – Adel Feb 12 '12 at 19:32
2  
Could this be a solution for the low accept rate problem? meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/71334/… – PiTheNumber Mar 19 '12 at 11:28
I'm sure someone else has pointed this out somewhere in this post, but suppose I ask a question and get 5 different very well explained answers, but none of those answers really help solve my question, and I don't accept any of them, that shouldn't count against me, because, why should I have to accept something which doesn't actually work? – Jerry Dodge Sep 22 '12 at 23:03
@JerryDodge Upvote them if you think they've put in effort and will be helpful to future readers. If any works for you, accept it. For example, the OP thought my answer here was a good one and correct too, but didn't accept it as it didn't work for him. – YatharthROCK Sep 25 '12 at 17:08

migrated from stackoverflow.com Jul 14 '09 at 14:39

3 Answers

up vote 455 down vote accepted

Accepting Answers: How does it work?

Accepting an answer is important as it both rewards posters for solving your problem and informs others that your issue is resolved.

  • You may select any answer on questions you asked as the "accepted" answer. Only one answer at a time can be the 'accepted' answer.
  • There's a brief period (15 minutes) immediately after asking the question when you can't accept an answer.
  • To mark an answer as accepted, click on the check mark beside the answer to toggle it from hollow to green (see screenshot below)
  • You may change which answer is accepted, or simply un-accept the answer, at any time.

images of the unselected and selected checkmarks

If you accept:

  • someone else's answer: You get +2 rep and the author of the accepted answer gets +15 rep.
  • your own answer: There is no reputation awarded and the answer does not float to the top of the list. This can be done no earlier than 48 hours after the question is asked.
  • a community-wiki answer: no reputation is awarded.

Which answer should I choose?

  • Don't hesitate to accept an answer that is well-written, suggests a good practice and works for you.
  • Otherwise, even if there are answers that are good enough but that you're not entirely satisfied by, you might wait 24 to 48 hours to give other people a chance to give you a better answer. A question with an accepted answer isn't as likely to receive further attention as one without an accepted answer.
  • Make sure that besides working for you, the answer is really good practice. Sometimes after the answer gets accepted, another comes in, uncovering the fact that previous one was in fact a bad hack.
  • The bottom line is that you should accept the answer that you found to be the most helpful to you, personally.

What should I do if none of the answers is suitable?

  • Re-read your question critically and make certain that it's clear what the problem is, and what the specific question is. You might want to place a bold single sentence version of your question at the bottom of your post to make sure it's clear what's being asked.
  • Re-read the answers. Consider accepting the best answer of the bunch, even if none of them are exactly what's needed.
  • Wait a few days after asking it, and then edit your question with what you've learned since asking it — perhaps additional information will help others help you. This will also have the effect of bringing your question back onto the home page where fresh eyes will see it.
  • If you have more than 75 reputation, you can add a bounty two days after the question is asked if you haven't accepted any answers yet. This will add incentive for people to answer your question.
  • Eventually you'll resolve the problem or find a work-around (which may be, "This won't work, so here's what I did instead"). Please add an answer with this information and accept your own answer so that others with your same question can see the path you eventually followed.
share|improve this answer
"If you see a middle of the road percentage, it’s an experienced user who understands what accepted answers are for." -- How do you reckon? Not enough info to infer that. – MrBoJangles Feb 2 '11 at 17:28
@MrBo, I agree that that can't be fully inferred. I changed the wording slightly to reflect that. – jjnguy Feb 2 '11 at 18:38
59  
why isn't this info added to the SO faq? Not many regular users will find it otherwise. – jgauffin Jul 1 '11 at 8:13
@MikeB There are lots of parts of Stack Overflow that aren't wiki-like. In this case, it is important to see which answer ultimately solved the user's problem. That way, people who find that question in the future know what solution worked for the original asker. – jjnguy May 30 '12 at 15:46
I don't think the 48 hour limit re answering your own question is still in effect, I have seen answers provided in my shorter periods by the OP. – Levon Jul 11 '12 at 11:06
What about up voting the answer when you accept it? It seems to me that the OP should also up vote the answer if their question was answered satisfactorily. – Sunil D. Jul 30 '12 at 19:00
@SunilD. It is up to the OP to decide whether or not to upvote. See: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/686/… – jjnguy Jul 30 '12 at 21:54
2  
@jgauffin Trust me when I say more people have read this answer than have read the FAQ. – Asad Dec 9 '12 at 20:17
"Consider accepting the best answer of the bunch, even if none of them are exactly what's needed." Sorry, I don't agree with that. There's nothing wrong with a legitimately unanswered question. – Duncan Jones Jan 17 at 14:44

What if more than one answer is suitable but none actually cover it all.

The actual accepted answer would in that case be a patchwork from other answers.

I could writeup my own answer from these pieces and eventually accept it but in doing so I would still like to reward the people who took the time to give their 2 cent.

It seems that currently there is no way to do this but it would be nice if we could (say create a group answer that would be displayed just like a normal answer with up-votes, comments and all, I could rephrase it to match what I have learned from the answers and check who participated in this. Rep could be distributed evenly amongst participants I have chosen)

Just an idea that would work nicely, least in theory !

share|improve this answer
24  
FWIW, creating your own answer as you describe was the intended behavior when SO launched: joelonsoftware.com/items/2008/09/15.html You could always upvote and link to the "contributor answers" in your answer; you could also mark your answer CW to encourage others to continue adding on. – Popular Demand Jun 23 '10 at 15:28
2  
yes but reps in community wiki is no longer distributed in any way. It's either on or off. If rep could be gained, albeit to a lesser extent, to group contributed answer it would encourage people to pitch in. Of course this opens the door to a whole new can of worms in gaming popular answers by contributing useless punctuation. That said i'm sure there is a balance to be had – Newtopian Nov 18 '11 at 16:20
You could always ask each of the part - answers answerers (is that a word?) to recognise the other answers in their question, and +1 each other? – Alex Brown Sep 10 '12 at 5:10

As for when, I would say wait between 24 and 48 hours before accepting one of the answers. That gives time for multiple answers to be offered. You should choose the best one, not simply the quickest one. It also allows time for other readers to vote answers up and down, which might affect your decision (in a good way).

share|improve this answer
31  
It especially allows for people in other timezones to have a chance to offer an answer. – Mark Hurd Apr 7 '10 at 4:15
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And even then, there's no problem selecting a different, better answer later. – Gaffi Jun 20 '12 at 16:42
2  
Would you mind to clarify what you mean by "Indian Giving"? I don't think the term is not what you are thinking. Hence using it here is offensive. I request you to learn what "Indian Giving" means and use only if necessary. – IamSJ Feb 26 at 2:55
1  
Note @JerryDodge made that comment five months ago. You're right, "Indian giver" is a pretty insulting stereotype. The metaphor refers to someone who gives something and then wants it back. It dates back to the 18th century. And that's where it should probably stay. – Bill Karwin Feb 26 at 3:40

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