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cottontail
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I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation, it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the secondsecond first result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solvingsolve certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the second result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solving certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation, it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the second first result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solve certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabledTimer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answerSo I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the second result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solving certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the second result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solving certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the second result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solving certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the second result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solving certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the second result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solving certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

I was searching for some information on a topic and found the following question: Timer doesn't want to start again after it was disabled.

I recently began learning about async/await from .NET 4.5 and was surprised to see that nobody had answered suggesting async/await. So I decided to provide my own answer, but since the question is older than one month and from a user who has very few reputation it is unlikely that this question will be maintained or even marked as answered. Yet it is the second result you get when you google for something like: "C# timer wont start again after disabled".

This made me think: How do we promote new answers to old questions?

For example, we have this vast knowledge base of C# questions and answers. But as the language evolves, there will be better ways to solving certain problems. How do we ensure that the newer approaches can be highlighted after the original activity in a question dies down? Sure, the original answers will work, but buried down at the bottom could be a more modern and more suitable solution that will be overlooked by the casual googler.

I read the following Q&As, but they don't seem to quite line up with my concern:

some more minor corrections to follow up on honk's spit polish
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Gimby
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fixed punctuation, improved wording, removed redundant and unneeded information, improved markup, added tag
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honk
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edited tags
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gnat
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TaRDy
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