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I recently flagged this answer as not being an answer

SQL - CASE STATEMENT - WHEN statement AND statement

This was declined with

declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer

The original answer had the line

Is the query below correct?

and then went on the add the code.

This to me would make it a new question and therefore not an answer. The person that edited the question just removed the question at the start making is seem like an answer even though it doesn't attempt to answer the question posed.

My question is should this flag have been accepted, should I have flagged this a different way or was I wrong to flag it at all?

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    You could also interpret "Is the query below correct?" as some form of "Try this:" where the answerer seeks confirmation from the OP whether the code works for them.
    – honk
    Jul 23, 2019 at 10:53
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    The answer does not even have the related names of the original question, In my view, it should not be considered as an answer. Jul 23, 2019 at 11:22
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    @honk I did consider that but the answer doesn't relate to the question nor attempt to answer it. So yes, that could be the case in some answers but I don't think it applies here.
    – ChrisM
    Jul 23, 2019 at 11:33

3 Answers 3

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I did not handle this flag, but I'm not surprised your flag was declined. Because it is easily missed that the post was edited to remove the initial 'Is the query below correct?` line, as that edit was made 6 years ago:

edited Jul 26 '13 at 1:26

When a moderator looks at the NAA flag dashboard, the context with the flag and answer is updated to add an edited marker, but only if a post was edited after flagging. While we can find out when a post was last edited by expanding the answer in the dashboard, we don't normally would even look at edits that far back. As it is, to the moderator that handled this flag, this post looked like a straight-forward attempt at answering, and so declined your NAA flag.

Note that it doesn't matter that to a subject expert looking more closely can spot that this query has very little in common with the question; we are not all subject experts, and the number of flags we handle each day don't leave us with much time to examine every answer in detail, nor would we want to expend much time on these flags.

I've now rolled back the bad edit and deleted the answer, but in future, when you come across a post that has been edited this far back a custom 'moderator attention' flag would be much more effective. Something along the lines of

This is not an answer, but a question that has since been edited to remove the question portion. That edit was wrong, and what remains is still not an answer. Please remove it.

Custom flags are there for the exceptions, this is one of those.

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    "and the number of flags we handle each day don't leave us with much time to examine every answer in detail." Maybe it's time for more meat for the grinder.
    – Braiam
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:10
  • 'and the number of flags we handle each day don't leave us with much time to examine every answer in detail.' - I'm not knocking anyone for this, ya'll do a great job, but, this IMHO, doesn't seem like a valid reason.
    – Script47
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:16
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    Let me qualify this further then: we are not going to examine every answer in detail. The NAA flag is designed for the obvious cases, of which there are plenty. Doing more is just a waste of a lot of time, where we can instead ask the community to put in a little bit of time into a custom flag.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:22
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I declined your flag.

The reason why I declined your flag is very similar to what Martijn mentions, but a very slight difference. I did open the post in a new tab. I usually open all the posts completely and check it once before declining the flag. (Mark Amery might call me slow witted, but I do say that I open every post before declining a flag, especially since this incident.)

The answer was a code only answer, and was downvoted. I saw that the post was edited ages ago, and therefore didn't feel the need to check its revisions. After that I declined the flag and moved on. Something which would have helped me to decide better here would have been to:

  • Either use a custom flag (preferred - since you don't have the 2k editing privs) to indicate that the answer was a NAA but later edited to a code-only answer.
  • Or roll it back to the version that was a NAA and then flag as NAA.

On a related note, lemme tell you a small story. A couple of years back when I was a normal user flagging NAAs, I noticed that a user had copied another answer completely and then added a thank you note. Something like this:

["{}{}".format(i,j) for i,j in zip(a,b)] this works. thank you

This was a clear NAA to someone who sees the post and the other answer. But if you had seen just the answer as it is, you can edit it to make it a valid answer.

This works for me:

["{}{}".format(i,j) for i,j in zip(a,b)]

and so you can guess the outcome of the NAA flag on the post. From then on, I did start to make sure of editing the NAA post to a proper NAA and then flagging as NAA (and it did work wonders). For e.g: that post can be edited to:

As Dave mentions: ["{}{}".format(i,j) for i,j in zip(a,b)] this works. thank you

which is a perfect NAA, and all the edit does is just add attribution to the copied part. So the lesson here is that we just need to make it clear that the post is a NAA, because the moderator on the other side of the computer would have no idea what your thought was while flagging the post.


Now to address the other concerns in the other answers. 1. Servy mentions that it was a rhetorical question, posted as an answer.

I can totally see where Servy is coming from, but I am on the fence here. The entire question is:

Is the query below correct?

Which can possibly be rephrased to:

Does this query work for you?

which would be a totally valid rhetorical question, and I would have declined the flags there asking users to not flag such posts for deletion. However, the sentence itself is very confusing and can be interpreted as "I have written the following query and I don't know if it is correct, can someone help me?". We do get a lot of questions that ask for help to execute the code that they have written and this might have been one of them.

It is very similar to the case of code-only self-answers, where we have no idea whether it should be an update to the question or an actual answer. I usually leave a comment on those:

This answer, as-is is slightly unclear and needs to be clarified in order for it to become a valid solution to this question. Please do [edit] the answer, and flag for undeletion once you have clarified as to how it is a proper answer to the question.

Given the fact that the question already had a lot of other valid answers, the answer itself being downvoted to negative 3 and not being nowhere similar to the other answers, as well as the problem that the user was unregistered, there doesn't seem to be a strong reason to pass this answer as a valid rhetorical-question-as-answer to the post, and deleting it as a NAA would be a better choice.


... and finally regarding the concerns about the moderator queue being too huge, I have to vehemently disagree. In the 3 months from April 1st to June 30th, moderators on Stack Overflow had kept the queue close to 0 and touching 0 at least once every week. We had handled almost 200,000 flags with an average waiting time of just over half an hour. The problem here was with the post itself, and that NAA wasn't supposed to be used here, atleast not without clarifications.

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  • Thanks, that makes sense, I will use more appropriate flags in future.
    – ChrisM
    Jul 24, 2019 at 9:09
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This post is not "Not An Answer". It's an attempt to answer the question. That the answer once included a rhetorical question asking if the solution is a good idea doesn't mean it's not an answer. It in fact makes it clear that it is proposing a solution, in that it's asking for feedback on it. It's just not a useful statement to include, which is why it was correctly removed by someone six years ago, as it's simply not a useful addition to the answer.

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    Small nitpick - I wouldn't call "Is this query correct?" in an answer a rhetorical question. I think it's a very real question expecting an answer from OP either in the form of an upvote, an accept mark, a comment, or all three.
    – TylerH
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:17
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    @TylerH I wouldn't be so sure. Lots of people include things like that, or "try this", or "I think this would work" or other types of qualifiers to their answer. I don't necessarily think the author was expecting someone to provide some detailed critique of their answer. But regardless, even if you don't think it was rhetorical, asking for feedback on their answer to the question still means it's an answer to the question. And of course regardless that request for feedback can be removed if it's not useful, as is the case here, and as was done here, leaving just the answer.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:21
  • @servy I don't think that is correct. If it was a question saying to try something or would this work then I would agree with that. However the code that remained wasn't related to the question posed and because of that it was likely the person was asking a separate question.
    – ChrisM
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:23
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    Sorry, in this case, this was not a rhetorical question. They really were asking for feedback if they had interpreted the other actual answers to implement this for their own query. The query they posted used an entirely different schema from the question subject, as well as different conditions for the CASE (using > greater than versus 3 possible compound tests).
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:24
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    @Servy: sorry, no, this was a new question, very badly worded.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:27
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    @MartijnPieters Sorry, no, this was an answer to the question, very badly worded.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:27
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    @Servy: don't be glib please, this is not going to go anywhere at this rate. How much SQL do you know? I can see that that query has issues, such as the embedded quotes. They never properly state why they are uncertain about their interpretation, but that's already a red flag right there.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:29
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    @MartijnPieters So it's okay for you to be glib, just not for anyone else? Why is that? If you want to keep this conversation on track then don't try to derail it yourself and blame me for it being derailed. Stay on topic and address the merits, and I'll be happy to do the same. That you see issues with they query doesn't mean it's not an answer. If you think it's a bad answer, then by all means, downvote it. That doesn't make it Not An Answer. Moderators are not expected use judge answers based on their quality or accuracy and delete them if they feel they're not good.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:32
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    @RobertHarvey I think that's Servy's point, it, not being a "not a great answer" implies is is an answer, voting should used here.
    – Script47
    Jul 23, 2019 at 14:50
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    @Script47: No, I don't think so. There's a "threshold effect" to flags; to justify undeletion, the material would have to "make the internet better," and I'm not convinced at all that's the case here. Jul 23, 2019 at 14:52
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    @Servy: note that moderators are explicitly the exception handlers of the site. We are given the leeway to cut Gordian knots in case of ambiguous cases. This is such a case, and in my opinion as a moderator and as someone with a reasonable level of SQL experience, it was posted as a question. Hence my assertion: sorry, no, this was a new question. And I'm going to leave the discussion with that, this has now wasted way, way too much time. Even if treated as an answer, it is a pretty crappy answer anyway and not worth undeleting when there are much better answers there.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 23, 2019 at 15:04
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    @RobertHarvey Moderators are not expected to be judging the quality and technical merits of answers and deleting answers that they don't think are quality answers. It's not your place to delete every answer that you don't think is helpful.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2019 at 15:13
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    @Servy While moderators are not expected to be able to judge answers on their quality/technical merits and then deleting them if they don't think so, they are given the power and authority to do so if they so choose. They aren't required to only use their mod powers in response to a flag.
    – TylerH
    Jul 23, 2019 at 15:14
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    @TylerH I don't really buy the argument that because moderators are allowed to deleted posts that they're free to delete whatever they want for any reason. That seems like a rather unreasonable interpretation of the phrase "moderator votes are binding". The rules state what types of posts should be deleted. That "a moderator thinks it isn't a good answer" isn't described as meriting deletion doesn't mean it's okay to delete answers for that reason. You need a reason to delete an answer, not a reason to not delete an answer.
    – Servy
    Jul 23, 2019 at 15:30
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    @Servy I wouldn't buy that argument either. Luckily that's not the argument I gave. Martijn thought the answer was low quality. Users with 20k rep can vote to delete answers once they're at a sufficiently negative score. Martijn has more than 20k rep and cast the third of three required votes. The only issue here is that you aren't able to cast an undelete vote because Martijn is also a moderator and mod-deleted answers can't be undelete-voted by normal users. So, do you wish to undelete this answer? If so, that's a separate issue from whether the answer is NAA or not.
    – TylerH
    Jul 23, 2019 at 15:34

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