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Nov 24, 2014 at 15:11 comment added Servy @Jongware Sure, but you still shouldn't actually post an answer until/unless you are confident that you have arrived at a correct solution. Whether you were confident in the topic when you read the question isn't important, but knowing that you know the answer when you actually post it is.
Nov 21, 2014 at 1:59 comment added Rahul @simonzack, that's true and it's a wrong attitude.
Nov 21, 2014 at 1:44 comment added simonzack @Rahul This does not just apply to high-rep users. I've seen some low-rep users post poor answers and have the attitude that "the question is wrong and they are right".
Nov 21, 2014 at 0:58 comment added Dan Getz @Jongware yes, and in those cases this guideline is even more important. There's researching an answer you knew little about before, and then there's "trying to come up with an answer" in the sense of posting random untested guesses, which is different. (Not referring to the OP, or you, here! Or you, the reader.)
Nov 21, 2014 at 0:31 comment added Rahul It's also worth mentioning that, sometimes the Confidence leads to arrogance and due to which there was argumentative fight over comments. I have observed that in many answers (mostly with people over 100K+ rep) which even includes few answers posted by yourself. [Just a observation, nothing personal].
Nov 20, 2014 at 22:41 comment added Jongware Personally, I find it a challenge to read questions outside my comfort zone and trying to come up with an answer. This has led me to read primers on various programming languages and related topics. You never know what may stand out to you as a possible answer, and (hopefully) what will stick.
Nov 20, 2014 at 17:41 history answered Servy CC BY-SA 3.0