Timeline for If the question is specifically about a certain language, is an answer in another language valid?
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
6 events
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Apr 16, 2015 at 7:59 | comment | added | Benubird | This is actually a problem I have encountered. Not often, but I occasionally search for "how do I X", only to discover that the accepted answer is "don't, do Y instead". So I then have to post a duplicate question, and tack on the note "PS. I actually do need to do X, not Y". I think it is very important that the answer matches the question. If the asker asked X but meant Y, and the accepted answer is for Y, then someone needs to edit the question so that it is asking Y instead of X. | |
Apr 15, 2015 at 14:23 | comment | added | Dennis Jaheruddin | @Benubird If a person asks how to achieve X with RegEx, the given answer can be very usefull for future visitors who also need to achieve X and think this can be done with RegEx. (Assuming it actually tells him how to do X). It will indeed not be usefull for people who want to use RegEx for Z, but that seems quite reasonable. -- In extreme examples you may want to assist searchability by suggesting a question title change from 'How to achieve X with RegEx' to 'How to achieve X' | |
Apr 15, 2015 at 12:45 | comment | added | Benubird | Disagree entirely. Sometimes I am searching for how to parse html with RegEx to achieve Z, and being told to use Y instead is useless because Y can only do X, not Z. For the sake of future visitors with similar-but-not-completely-identical questions, you should answer the question that was actually asked, not whatever you think the asker really meant. | |
Apr 15, 2015 at 12:34 | comment | added | Baldrick | I think your particular example question would be marked as a duplicate... and a rather famous one at that! :) | |
Apr 13, 2015 at 15:15 | comment | added | Sobrique | I'd allow a different language when 'wants' is expressed as 'needs a shell script' but practically speaking they want something that'll run on a generic linux box. Thus whilst shell might not be appropriate, python or perl might be acceptable alternatives. | |
Apr 13, 2015 at 11:27 | history | answered | Dennis Jaheruddin | CC BY-SA 3.0 |