Skip to main content
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

Code absolutely would help that answer. You're calling out a certain portion of the question code descriptively "reuse of component descriptors". There's nothing at all from preventing you from pulling an example of the code that is breaking on old React from the question into your answer.

There is no rule that code in an answer needs to be self-written. It is often very helpful to pull bits from the question and explain thempull bits from the question and explain them. A new programmer would have a terrible time if I had described that code abstractly ("reading from a stream to a memory location controlled by an uninitialized pointer"), because they likely don't have the level of understanding to match the description with the code.

Code absolutely would help that answer. You're calling out a certain portion of the question code descriptively "reuse of component descriptors". There's nothing at all from preventing you from pulling an example of the code that is breaking on old React from the question into your answer.

There is no rule that code in an answer needs to be self-written. It is often very helpful to pull bits from the question and explain them. A new programmer would have a terrible time if I had described that code abstractly ("reading from a stream to a memory location controlled by an uninitialized pointer"), because they likely don't have the level of understanding to match the description with the code.

Code absolutely would help that answer. You're calling out a certain portion of the question code descriptively "reuse of component descriptors". There's nothing at all from preventing you from pulling an example of the code that is breaking on old React from the question into your answer.

There is no rule that code in an answer needs to be self-written. It is often very helpful to pull bits from the question and explain them. A new programmer would have a terrible time if I had described that code abstractly ("reading from a stream to a memory location controlled by an uninitialized pointer"), because they likely don't have the level of understanding to match the description with the code.

added 270 characters in body
Source Link
Ben Voigt
  • 283.2k
  • 10
  • 110
  • 146

Code absolutely would help that answer. You're calling out a certain portion of the question code descriptively "reuse of component descriptors". There's nothing at all from preventing you from pulling an example of the code that is breaking on old React from the question into your answer.

There is no rule that code in an answer needs to be self-written. It is often very helpful to pull bits from the question and explain them. A new programmer would have a terrible time if I had described that code abstractly ("reading from a stream to a memory location controlled by an uninitialized pointer"), because they likely don't have the level of understanding to match the description with the code.

Code absolutely would help that answer. You're calling out a certain portion of the question code descriptively "reuse of component descriptors". There's nothing at all from preventing you from pulling an example of the code that is breaking on old React from the question into your answer.

There is no rule that code in an answer needs to be self-written. It is often very helpful to pull bits from the question and explain them.

Code absolutely would help that answer. You're calling out a certain portion of the question code descriptively "reuse of component descriptors". There's nothing at all from preventing you from pulling an example of the code that is breaking on old React from the question into your answer.

There is no rule that code in an answer needs to be self-written. It is often very helpful to pull bits from the question and explain them. A new programmer would have a terrible time if I had described that code abstractly ("reading from a stream to a memory location controlled by an uninitialized pointer"), because they likely don't have the level of understanding to match the description with the code.

Source Link
Ben Voigt
  • 283.2k
  • 10
  • 110
  • 146

Code absolutely would help that answer. You're calling out a certain portion of the question code descriptively "reuse of component descriptors". There's nothing at all from preventing you from pulling an example of the code that is breaking on old React from the question into your answer.

There is no rule that code in an answer needs to be self-written. It is often very helpful to pull bits from the question and explain them.