It's fine to include a partial solution when you initially post your question, or in response to "what have you tried?" comments. However, you certainly shouldn't make any substantial edits to your questions once relevant answers start rolling in. Sometimes it makes sense to add info to the question when you realise that answerers are misinterpreting what the code needs to do, or what the data looks like, but ideally that should happen before any answers are submitted. The key point here is that you shouldn't make major changes to your question that invalidate those existing answers. If you do need to make major changes then the best thing to do is to realise that you accidentally asked the wrong question, and to start again with a fresh question, possibly linking it to the old one.
You definitely should not add material to your question that was written in the answers. Eg, "Joe said to use this code
, but when I tried it on my actual data, I got this wrong result
". That doesn't work well with the Stack Exchange Q & A format. In that format one person submits a question, and (hopefully :)) people submit answers in response to it. It's not designed for an interactive back-and-forth tutorial session. If you need that sort of thing it may be possible to do that to some extent in a chat room.
However, if you want to grab information from one or more of the submitted answers and combine that into your own solution you are certainly welcome to do that, but you need to post it in the Answers section, not add it to the question. (And of course your answer should mention the names of the people whose code you've copied). If you write some code that way which is only a partial solution that doesn't do what you really want, then you shouldn't post it as an answer. Instead, post it in a follow-up question, linking back to the original question.
x
withtemp
, so posting a new answer seems useless.