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This answer to this bounty question is a collection of other answers from questions previously asked on Stack Overflow. To me, answers that post links or information from other SO questions are NAA, because the question should be flagged as a duplicate if the question has already been asked and an answer exists.

What is the consensus on answers that link to or contain information from other Stack Overflow questions?
Are they not actually answers?

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2 Answers 2

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Is it an attempt at answering the question?

If the answer is yes (Which it is), then "NAA" doesn't apply there.

The answers can still be incorrect, low quality, or flaggable for some other reason.
NAA should really only be used for post that don't attempt to answer the question:

  • Comments posted as answer
  • "I have this problem too!" - posts

Stuff like that.

While spam posts are often NAA, don't flag them as NAA. Flag it as spam.

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Why on earth would you ding an answer for containing information from other questions/answers? That's ridiculous. If there's a general Q/A pair somewhere that mostly applies to a specific situation, but also requires an additional note from somewhere else, and the answer consists of quoting those two answers* and adding a little bit of glue, that's perfectly fine. Upvote-worthy, even. Or, as in this case, aggregating multiple different approaches into a single easier-to-find answer is reasonable enough.

Now, if the questions are actually duplicates, that's another story; usually I see link-only answers that are basically dupe-flags or reposting the same answer from the same account multiple times, rather than quotes of others' answers, but in any case those should just be flags as duplicate, not answers. Since it's impossible to flag a question as a simultaneous duplicate of two off-site questions and one on-site, that's not relevant.

*Yes, with attribution.

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    The answer didn't support its own original content with quotes from other answers. It contains no original content at all; only quotes. The two quotes aren't two halves of a complete answer, but rather two different people's answers to the same question, meaning that either these answers don't answer the question being asked, or the questions are duplicates.
    – Servy
    Oct 26, 2015 at 15:49
  • @Servy: As previously noted, you can't flag a question as a dupe of three different questions on two different sites, so at some point, you're going to have to work out which answers are applicable and collect them together. It would be nice to split them apart and determine which conditions lead to which answers applying, certainly, but failure to do that is not grounds for deletion as "not an answer" (or, probably, at all). Oct 26, 2015 at 17:53
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    I see no basis for assuming that all three answers are needed to answer the question. The answers contain different approaches to solve the same problem. One does not need to read every single one of the answers to solve the problem. I never said that the answer is NAA, but it isn't an appropriate answer (for a different reason).
    – Servy
    Oct 26, 2015 at 17:56
  • @Servy: Like I said, it would be nice if the answer gave conditions for using the different approaches, but just because it doesn't is no reason to delete it. Oct 26, 2015 at 18:02
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    The fact that its adding zero value is a reason to delete it though.
    – Servy
    Oct 26, 2015 at 18:03
  • @Servy: I have a higher bar for what merits deletion, apparently. Short of a thorough untangling effort that sorts out the four+ questions and resolves them as cross-site duplicates with a single optimum answer, there's no good reason to delete an answer that would qualify as the base for that. Oct 26, 2015 at 18:06
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    So because someone could turn the useless answer into a good answer means that it's not useless? It doesn't really work that way.
    – Servy
    Oct 26, 2015 at 18:11
  • @Servy: It's not useless. That's all. Oct 26, 2015 at 18:13
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    It's adding zero value. It's just repeating already available information. That's not useful.
    – Servy
    Oct 26, 2015 at 18:15

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