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James Webster
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The people who are directly involved in the merge, i.e. those who asked and answered the questions are informed via notifications.

People who come across the question later don't really need to know it was merged so long as the answer matches the question. I think it's just noise.

The "confusion" about time stamps isn't much of a problem either. I rarely, if ever, compare the question time stamp to the answer time stamp. I pretty much look exclusively at the answer time to verify that it's up to date enough. The question time is often immaterial.

The people who are directly involved in the merge, i.e. those who asked and answered the questions are informed via notifications.

People who come across the question later don't really need to know it was merged so long as the answer matches the question. I think it's just noise.

The people who are directly involved in the merge, i.e. those who asked and answered the questions are informed via notifications.

People who come across the question later don't really need to know it was merged so long as the answer matches the question. I think it's just noise.

The "confusion" about time stamps isn't much of a problem either. I rarely, if ever, compare the question time stamp to the answer time stamp. I pretty much look exclusively at the answer time to verify that it's up to date enough. The question time is often immaterial.

Source Link
James Webster
  • 32k
  • 2
  • 21
  • 26

The people who are directly involved in the merge, i.e. those who asked and answered the questions are informed via notifications.

People who come across the question later don't really need to know it was merged so long as the answer matches the question. I think it's just noise.