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replaced http://blog.stackoverflow.com with https://blog.stackoverflow.com
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No, you didn't use the wrong flag; you shouldn't have flagged at all.

You should always raise a flag when you see a problem that you can't address yourself. In this scenario, you should then choose the flagging option that best describes the problem; if none exists, you should then choose "other" and describe the problem yourself.

But you didn't describe a problem here. You made an observation as to the usefulness of the answer. That's different. A moderator reading that might nod sagely while sipping his tea and grunt in recognition of your observational skills, but... At that point he's pretty much left with nothing to do; there's no problem to be solved, no exception to handleno exception to handle. If you didn't think the answer was useful, you already had the tools to handle that yourself:

the image of a downvote button

For a more in-depth look at evaluating answers, check out my guide to differentiating between things that are apples and things that are not: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?

No, you didn't use the wrong flag; you shouldn't have flagged at all.

You should always raise a flag when you see a problem that you can't address yourself. In this scenario, you should then choose the flagging option that best describes the problem; if none exists, you should then choose "other" and describe the problem yourself.

But you didn't describe a problem here. You made an observation as to the usefulness of the answer. That's different. A moderator reading that might nod sagely while sipping his tea and grunt in recognition of your observational skills, but... At that point he's pretty much left with nothing to do; there's no problem to be solved, no exception to handle. If you didn't think the answer was useful, you already had the tools to handle that yourself:

the image of a downvote button

For a more in-depth look at evaluating answers, check out my guide to differentiating between things that are apples and things that are not: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?

No, you didn't use the wrong flag; you shouldn't have flagged at all.

You should always raise a flag when you see a problem that you can't address yourself. In this scenario, you should then choose the flagging option that best describes the problem; if none exists, you should then choose "other" and describe the problem yourself.

But you didn't describe a problem here. You made an observation as to the usefulness of the answer. That's different. A moderator reading that might nod sagely while sipping his tea and grunt in recognition of your observational skills, but... At that point he's pretty much left with nothing to do; there's no problem to be solved, no exception to handle. If you didn't think the answer was useful, you already had the tools to handle that yourself:

the image of a downvote button

For a more in-depth look at evaluating answers, check out my guide to differentiating between things that are apples and things that are not: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?

replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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No, you didn't use the wrong flag; you shouldn't have flagged at all.

You should always raise a flag when you see a problem that you can't address yourself. In this scenario, you should then choose the flagging option that best describes the problem; if none exists, you should then choose "other" and describe the problem yourself.

But you didn't describe a problem here. You made an observation as to the usefulness of the answer. That's different. A moderator reading that might nod sagely while sipping his tea and grunt in recognition of your observational skills, but... At that point he's pretty much left with nothing to do; there's no problem to be solved, no exception to handle. If you didn't think the answer was useful, you already had the tools to handle that yourself:

the image of a downvote buttonthe image of a downvote button

For a more in-depth look at evaluating answers, check out my guide to differentiating between things that are apples and things that are not: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?

No, you didn't use the wrong flag; you shouldn't have flagged at all.

You should always raise a flag when you see a problem that you can't address yourself. In this scenario, you should then choose the flagging option that best describes the problem; if none exists, you should then choose "other" and describe the problem yourself.

But you didn't describe a problem here. You made an observation as to the usefulness of the answer. That's different. A moderator reading that might nod sagely while sipping his tea and grunt in recognition of your observational skills, but... At that point he's pretty much left with nothing to do; there's no problem to be solved, no exception to handle. If you didn't think the answer was useful, you already had the tools to handle that yourself:

the image of a downvote button

For a more in-depth look at evaluating answers, check out my guide to differentiating between things that are apples and things that are not: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?

No, you didn't use the wrong flag; you shouldn't have flagged at all.

You should always raise a flag when you see a problem that you can't address yourself. In this scenario, you should then choose the flagging option that best describes the problem; if none exists, you should then choose "other" and describe the problem yourself.

But you didn't describe a problem here. You made an observation as to the usefulness of the answer. That's different. A moderator reading that might nod sagely while sipping his tea and grunt in recognition of your observational skills, but... At that point he's pretty much left with nothing to do; there's no problem to be solved, no exception to handle. If you didn't think the answer was useful, you already had the tools to handle that yourself:

the image of a downvote button

For a more in-depth look at evaluating answers, check out my guide to differentiating between things that are apples and things that are not: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?

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Shog9
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No, you didn't use the wrong flag; you shouldn't have flagged at all.

You should always raise a flag when you see a problem that you can't address yourself. In this scenario, you should then choose the flagging option that best describes the problem; if none exists, you should then choose "other" and describe the problem yourself.

But you didn't describe a problem here. You made an observation as to the usefulness of the answer. That's different. A moderator reading that might nod sagely while sipping his tea and grunt in recognition of your observational skills, but... At that point he's pretty much left with nothing to do; there's no problem to be solved, no exception to handle. If you didn't think the answer was useful, you already had the tools to handle that yourself:

the image of a downvote button

For a more in-depth look at evaluating answers, check out my guide to differentiating between things that are apples and things that are not: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?