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remove nonesense at end
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worldofjr
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I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable and you don't see why they won't work. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them. Or perhaps you do actually know the answer is correct, but you haven't spotted the typo that will make it fail.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

If you have any confessions, they could also be interesting!

I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable and you don't see why they won't work. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them. Or perhaps you do actually know the answer is correct, but you haven't spotted the typo that will make it fail.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

If you have any confessions, they could also be interesting!

I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable and you don't see why they won't work. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them. Or perhaps you do actually know the answer is correct, but you haven't spotted the typo that will make it fail.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

better explaination
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worldofjr
  • 3.9k
  • 2
  • 20
  • 40

I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable and you don't see why they won't work. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them. Or perhaps you do actually know the answer is correct, but you haven't spotted the typo that will make it fail.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

If you have any confessions, they could also be interesting!

I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable and you don't see why they won't work. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

If you have any confessions, they could also be interesting!

I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable and you don't see why they won't work. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them. Or perhaps you do actually know the answer is correct, but you haven't spotted the typo that will make it fail.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

If you have any confessions, they could also be interesting!

improved answer
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worldofjr
  • 3.9k
  • 2
  • 20
  • 40

I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable and you don't see why they won't work. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

If you have any confessions, they could also be interesting!

I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

If you have any confessions, they could also be interesting!

I am guilty of this, and I suspect most users have been at some point.

You arrive at a question, either because you're just browsing or you think you could answer it. You realise that either the question is beyond your expertise, or someone has already answered and it looks like a reasonable answer.

You think, I'll do some voting while I'm here, and upvote the answer or answers that look reasonable and you don't see why they won't work. Perhaps two or more answers are basically or functionally the same, so that's why you upvote them.

The problem is, you're guessing if they actually solve the question or not because, as I said, the question itself is not one you can answer with any confidence - or perhaps the method they've used is not one you're familiar with. In this or any similar situation, is it reasonable to upvote an answer if you don't know if it works or not, because you think it probably will?

If you have any confessions, they could also be interesting!

modify question
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worldofjr
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worldofjr
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