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I have also had this happen to me on multiple occasions... I usually get away by:

  • Rolling back the question to the original state and

  • politely notify the user that if he has a new question to ask a new question and provide a link to the current one and explain the relation (if any)

Believe me, this method works most of the time: [1][1],[2][2],[3][3],[4][4],[5][5],[6][6],[7][7]

Also, worth mentioning that radical editing of the original question invalidates current answers.

I have also had this happen to me on multiple occasions... I usually get away by:

  • Rolling back the question to the original state and

  • politely notify the user that if he has a new question to ask a new question and provide a link to the current one and explain the relation (if any)

Believe me, this method works most of the time: [1],[2],[3],[4],[5],[6],[7]

Also, worth mentioning that radical editing of the original question invalidates current answers.

I have also had this happen to me on multiple occasions... I usually get away by:

  • Rolling back the question to the original state and

  • politely notify the user that if he has a new question to ask a new question and provide a link to the current one and explain the relation (if any)

Believe me, this method works most of the time: [1],[2],[3],[4],[5],[6],[7]

Also, worth mentioning that radical editing of the original question invalidates current answers.

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user2140173
user2140173

I have also had this happen to me on multiple occasions... I usually get away by:

  • Rolling back the question to the original state and

  • politely notify the user that if he has a new question to ask a new question and provide a link to the current one and explain the relation (if any)

Believe me, this method works most of the time: [1],[2],[3],[4],[5],[6],[7]

Also, worth mentioning that radical editing of the original question invalidates current answers.