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I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answerThis answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library referenced is at a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library referenced is at a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library referenced is at a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answerIt is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library referenced is at a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library referenced is at a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library referenced is at a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

Clarify which location is the well-known, stable one. The previous wording suggests the Stack Overflow is the stable location.
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Matt Ball
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I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library in question is referenced fromis at a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library in question is referenced from a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

I don't see what high-rep has to do with this, except possibly a presumption of not being spam (pending investigation on what else the user did to gain reputation).

High-scoring and accepted are indications that the link is useful and should be kept in a comment. As a moderator, I would err on the side of converting to a comment unless there are hints to the contrary (e.g. the link is mentioned in another answer, or the flag says “the solution behind this link is the same as Joe's answer”, or there is a strong smell of spam).

But any link-only answer should be deleted. It is not an answer.

As a moderator, doing this is your job, especially in cases when the community cannot act, such as high-scoring or accepted answers.

If someone wants to include content from behind the link in an answer, they can and should post an answer of their own. Editing the link-only answer would generally be a radical change (it might be acceptable if all the edit does is to introduce a literal quote from the cited web page, but not if the editor introduces wording of their own).

Note: by “link-only answer”, I mean a post that does not contain any content that answers the question, but contains a link to a web page where an answer may be found. A post which contains a terse answer and is formatted as a link is not a link-only answer.

This answer (in its first revision, it has now been edited) is a non-obvious case: it says “use this particular library”, with a link to said library. When the library referenced is at a well-known, stable location, this kind of answer is a generally poor answer but an answer nonetheless: it says “use this”. On the other hand, when the library is “the code on Joe's blog”, this is not an answer: you have to read Joe's blog to find out what is meant. The way to tell link-only answers is: if you didn't have hypertext links, would the post still be useful? If the answer is yes (e.g. because the answer gives a name of a module from the standard library), then the post is an answer. If the answer is no, then the post is a sign that says “there's an answer over there”, it is not an answer.

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