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Oct 24, 2021 at 8:34 history closed bad_coder
Stephen RauchMod
il_raffa
Robert Longson
Donald Duck
Duplicate of Outdated Answers: accepted answer is now unpinned on Stack Overflow
Oct 24, 2021 at 3:02 review Close votes
Oct 24, 2021 at 8:34
May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Dec 15, 2014 at 15:55 comment added Andrey Just ant to add another example. A perfectly good question, with a simply wrong accepted answer, and then a good answer below it stackoverflow.com/questions/6521354/…
May 23, 2014 at 23:56 history edited animusonStaffMod
edited tags
May 22, 2014 at 16:10 vote accept BradleyDotNET
May 22, 2014 at 9:40 history edited gnat CC BY-SA 3.0
http://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/score
May 21, 2014 at 23:51 answer added Shog9 timeline score: 6
May 21, 2014 at 22:41 comment added BradleyDotNET @user414076, I'm definitely open to discussion on an appropriate threshold. -2 seems reasonable because 2 users have to agree (helping to remove the possibility of gaming it). Seems like a good answer!
May 21, 2014 at 22:36 comment added Anthony Pegram It's been a while since I've participated on this site, but I seem to recall a special case already exists with self-accepted answers -- they do not bubble to the top. I do not think it unreasonable to add another exception for answers with a score below some threshold. Perhaps it isn't precisely 0, as if there's just one vote, you really do not have enough sample size, and therein might lie the problem to any solution here. Still, you'd like to think a -2 or -3 would be sufficient to say "stay away from this, regardless of the whim of the asker."
May 21, 2014 at 21:43 answer added Rachel timeline score: 0
May 21, 2014 at 21:07 history edited BradleyDotNET CC BY-SA 3.0
added 217 characters in body
May 21, 2014 at 20:46 history edited BradleyDotNET CC BY-SA 3.0
clarified position and request
May 21, 2014 at 20:31 answer added Servy timeline score: 8
May 21, 2014 at 20:30 comment added BradleyDotNET @Rachel, The "ItemsSource={Binding}" creates highly ambiguous behavior, which is wrong as far as I'm concerned (and if it was included and the previous snippet ran in the constructor, it would have caused the desired behavior to not occur). There were of course, other problems with it as well. It did (at least sort of) work though.
May 21, 2014 at 20:21 comment added Rachel For the record, the negative accepted answer in that question isn't wrong, its just bad coding in most cases when working with WPF. :)
May 21, 2014 at 18:59 answer added Sam I am says Reinstate Monica timeline score: 3
May 21, 2014 at 18:50 comment added BradleyDotNET @SamIam, unquestionably. I am not suggesting we take away "acceptance powers" from the OP (indeed, he commented saying the accepted solution worked regardless of our comments indicating dangers). Does that mean bad, or even dangerous, solutions should be pinned to the top just because the OP says they worked? (In this case I strongly suspect he didn't actually use the breaking piece because it was off-screen).
May 21, 2014 at 18:48 comment added Sam I am says Reinstate Monica The OP is uniquely qualified to select a correct answer because the OP is the one that's actually experiencing the problem, and the OP is the one that's actually going to test the answer
May 21, 2014 at 18:44 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 3.0
Copy edited. (its = possessive, it's = "it is" or "it has". See for example <http://www.wikihow.com/Use-its-and-it's>.)
May 21, 2014 at 18:29 comment added Brad Larson Mod Better yet, let's not give accepted answers preferential ordering: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/253754/19679
May 21, 2014 at 18:15 comment added BradleyDotNET @Emissary, probably not. The optimist in me would like to think so though :)
May 21, 2014 at 18:13 comment added Emissary Can the folks who don't pay attention and/or read several sources before committing to any particular approach really be helped?
May 21, 2014 at 18:09 history asked BradleyDotNET CC BY-SA 3.0