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I have just answered this questionthis question and, because the process of discovering the answer was so revelatory to me, I amended the question so that its subject line reflected my solution, rather than the problem the OP, without hindsight, originally faced.

To save you chasing the link, the original subject was

Perl script not preserving unicode strings - why?

and after I discovered the problem, I changed it to

Perl UTF-8 encoding on DATA and ARGV file handles

My question is whether this is a legitimate edit on my part.

I am far more interested in the challenges that the questions hold than the reputation points that my answer may gain, but Stack Overflow's core purpose is to create a library of solutions to programming problems, so better indexing of the content can only further that.

I can imagine many problems if similar editing becomes commonplace, not least that those who post an answer will be competing to edit the subject line of the question so as to favour their own answer. But of course that is possible at present and doesn't seem to happen.

I have just answered this question and, because the process of discovering the answer was so revelatory to me, I amended the question so that its subject line reflected my solution, rather than the problem the OP, without hindsight, originally faced.

To save you chasing the link, the original subject was

Perl script not preserving unicode strings - why?

and after I discovered the problem, I changed it to

Perl UTF-8 encoding on DATA and ARGV file handles

My question is whether this is a legitimate edit on my part.

I am far more interested in the challenges that the questions hold than the reputation points that my answer may gain, but Stack Overflow's core purpose is to create a library of solutions to programming problems, so better indexing of the content can only further that.

I can imagine many problems if similar editing becomes commonplace, not least that those who post an answer will be competing to edit the subject line of the question so as to favour their own answer. But of course that is possible at present and doesn't seem to happen.

I have just answered this question and, because the process of discovering the answer was so revelatory to me, I amended the question so that its subject line reflected my solution, rather than the problem the OP, without hindsight, originally faced.

To save you chasing the link, the original subject was

Perl script not preserving unicode strings - why?

and after I discovered the problem, I changed it to

Perl UTF-8 encoding on DATA and ARGV file handles

My question is whether this is a legitimate edit on my part.

I am far more interested in the challenges that the questions hold than the reputation points that my answer may gain, but Stack Overflow's core purpose is to create a library of solutions to programming problems, so better indexing of the content can only further that.

I can imagine many problems if similar editing becomes commonplace, not least that those who post an answer will be competing to edit the subject line of the question so as to favour their own answer. But of course that is possible at present and doesn't seem to happen.

deleted 18 characters in body
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Borodin
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I have just answered this question and, because the process of discovering the answer was so revelatory to me, I amended the question so that its subject line reflected my solution, rather than the problem with which the OP was originally faced with, without hindsight, originally faced.

To save you chasing the link, the original subject was

Perl script not preserving unicode strings - why?

and after I discovered the problem, I changed it to

Perl UTF-8 encoding on DATA and ARGV file handles

My question is whether this is a legitimate edit on my part.

I am far more interested in the challenges that the questions hold than the reputation points that my answer may gain, but Stack Overflow's core purpose is to create a library of solutions to programming problems, so better indexing of the content can only further that.

I can imagine many problems if similar editing becomes commonplace, not least that those who post an answer will be competing to edit the subject line of the question so as to favour their own answer. But of course that is possible at present and doesn't seem to happen.

I have just answered this question and, because the process of discovering the answer was so revelatory to me, I amended the question so that its subject line reflected my solution rather than the problem with which the OP was originally faced with, without hindsight.

To save you chasing the link, the original subject was

Perl script not preserving unicode strings - why?

and after I discovered the problem, I changed it to

Perl UTF-8 encoding on DATA and ARGV file handles

My question is whether this is a legitimate edit on my part.

I am far more interested in the challenges that the questions hold than the reputation points that my answer may gain, but Stack Overflow's core purpose is to create a library of solutions to programming problems, so better indexing of the content can only further that.

I can imagine many problems if similar editing becomes commonplace, not least that those who post an answer will be competing to edit the subject line of the question so as to favour their own answer. But of course that is possible at present and doesn't seem to happen.

I have just answered this question and, because the process of discovering the answer was so revelatory to me, I amended the question so that its subject line reflected my solution, rather than the problem the OP, without hindsight, originally faced.

To save you chasing the link, the original subject was

Perl script not preserving unicode strings - why?

and after I discovered the problem, I changed it to

Perl UTF-8 encoding on DATA and ARGV file handles

My question is whether this is a legitimate edit on my part.

I am far more interested in the challenges that the questions hold than the reputation points that my answer may gain, but Stack Overflow's core purpose is to create a library of solutions to programming problems, so better indexing of the content can only further that.

I can imagine many problems if similar editing becomes commonplace, not least that those who post an answer will be competing to edit the subject line of the question so as to favour their own answer. But of course that is possible at present and doesn't seem to happen.

Source Link
Borodin
  • 126.7k
  • 14
  • 19

Amending subject line to attract searches

I have just answered this question and, because the process of discovering the answer was so revelatory to me, I amended the question so that its subject line reflected my solution rather than the problem with which the OP was originally faced with, without hindsight.

To save you chasing the link, the original subject was

Perl script not preserving unicode strings - why?

and after I discovered the problem, I changed it to

Perl UTF-8 encoding on DATA and ARGV file handles

My question is whether this is a legitimate edit on my part.

I am far more interested in the challenges that the questions hold than the reputation points that my answer may gain, but Stack Overflow's core purpose is to create a library of solutions to programming problems, so better indexing of the content can only further that.

I can imagine many problems if similar editing becomes commonplace, not least that those who post an answer will be competing to edit the subject line of the question so as to favour their own answer. But of course that is possible at present and doesn't seem to happen.