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Timeline for Deleting an accepted answer

Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0

25 events
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Nov 17, 2017 at 21:15 answer added klutt timeline score: 0
May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Jun 7, 2014 at 12:35 comment added Rahul @CodyGray, Thanks for the info. I am approaching towards that :)
Jun 7, 2014 at 12:33 comment added Cody Gray Mod @Rahul Users with 20k+ reputation and moderators can delete any answer, regardless of whether it is accepted. What they cannot do is remove the accept checkmark or switch it to another answer. Only the person who asked the question can do that.
Jun 6, 2014 at 19:52 comment added Rahul WHAT? How can a accepted answer be deleted? In some other Meta post I red that "an accepted answer can't be deleted .. not even by Moderator". Then how this deletion was made possible?
Jun 6, 2014 at 17:02 vote accept Wolf
Jun 6, 2014 at 16:25 comment added l4mpi @Izkata that reasoning implies that the new answer does not solve the problem anymore, which seems unlikely. You're also implying all upvotes come from people with a similar problem who found the answer helpful, not just from random users who upvote a seemingly plausible but wrong answer. But I think we're mostly on the same page here - if the wrong answer contained helpful content, this should not be deleted by an edit unless it would become redundant (and given it is on-topic and related to the question, of course).
Jun 6, 2014 at 15:25 comment added Izkata @l4mpi The difference between "improving the answer" and "changing the answer" is that after changing it, the answer won't necessarily still apply to those who upvoted it because it solved their problems. If you change it, those votes are now a lie. Improving the answer without changing it does not invalidate those votes. wheaties' answer is somewhere in the middle.
Jun 6, 2014 at 15:20 comment added Anthony Pegram I say it would be nice if (a) wholesale changes to an answer automatically invalidated the checkmark or (b) the answerer could simply reject it (perhaps within a reasonable timeframe, to prevent coming in months/years later and just rage quitting). I don't know if either has been proposed and/or shot down, however.
Jun 6, 2014 at 15:16 history edited Brad Koch CC BY-SA 3.0
title spelling, grammar
Jun 6, 2014 at 15:16 comment added Anthony Pegram @l4mpi, for some silly reason, we think the asker is important and award his or her judgment some special meaning. If that person says a totally wrong answer solved their issue, we have to go with it. It's silly, but those are the rules. If we then change what the user said fixed the problem to something else entirely, we undermine the checkmark and all the silliness that goes along with it.
Jun 6, 2014 at 15:13 answer added user2009750 timeline score: 3
Jun 6, 2014 at 15:06 comment added Izkata @l4mpi Upvoters and downvoters aren't alerted when an answer is edited, so completely changing it is rather dishonest, especially when it was accepted/highly upvoted.
Jun 6, 2014 at 14:53 comment added Andrew Barber Mod +1 for the desire - and taking action - to curate your content for quality!
Jun 6, 2014 at 14:36 answer added wheaties timeline score: 116
Jun 6, 2014 at 14:05 history edited Wolf CC BY-SA 3.0
minor wording tweakes
Jun 6, 2014 at 14:02 comment added Wolf @l4mpi seems true for this special case. But for this question, it was just an example.
Jun 6, 2014 at 12:57 comment added l4mpi "because completely changing an accepted answer felt wrong to me" - I don't understand your reasoning behind that. If your answer is false but already accepted, and OP doesn't respond to a request to un-accept it, changing the accepted answer is infinitely better than having a wrong accepted answer on the site. That said, in this specific case it probably doesn't matter as the question very unlikely to help any future visitors regardless...
Jun 6, 2014 at 11:11 comment added Wooble It's been deleted by the community now.
Jun 6, 2014 at 10:33 comment added Bart You could potentially flag for moderator attention and explain the situation. But still the easiest is a simple request to the OP to unaccept.
Jun 6, 2014 at 10:29 comment added Wolf @CodyGray and @ kapa thanks for your help! Is this the only way?
Jun 6, 2014 at 10:23 comment added kapa It's deleted now.
Jun 6, 2014 at 10:21 comment added Cody Gray Mod I've voted to delete it. 2 more 20k+ users and it should disappear. :-)
Jun 6, 2014 at 10:20 comment added Bart "if the asker doesn't remove the accept flag" ... nothing
Jun 6, 2014 at 10:19 history asked Wolf CC BY-SA 3.0