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lacked quotation of first quote
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serv-inc
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A canonical reference would be Jeff Atwood's post on humor. Concerning questions, where SO is way more strict than answers, he gives three criteria:

  1. Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?

  2. Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?

  3. Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?

  1. Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?

  2. Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?

  3. Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?

And then concludes

As Meat Loaf once said, two out of three ain't bad. It's guideline #3 that ends up being the pivotal decision in most borderline cases.

Applying above to this answer: it is accepted by the community (1520 upvotes) and it teaches something ....

Seems like a clear accept.

A canonical reference would be Jeff Atwood's post on humor. Concerning questions, where SO is way more strict than answers, he gives three criteria:

  1. Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?

  2. Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?

  3. Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?

And then concludes

As Meat Loaf once said, two out of three ain't bad. It's guideline #3 that ends up being the pivotal decision in most borderline cases.

Applying above to this answer: it is accepted by the community (1520 upvotes) and it teaches something ....

Seems like a clear accept.

A canonical reference would be Jeff Atwood's post on humor. Concerning questions, where SO is way more strict than answers, he gives three criteria:

  1. Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?

  2. Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?

  3. Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?

And then concludes

As Meat Loaf once said, two out of three ain't bad. It's guideline #3 that ends up being the pivotal decision in most borderline cases.

Applying above to this answer: it is accepted by the community (1520 upvotes) and it teaches something ....

Seems like a clear accept.

minor wordsmithing
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gnat
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A canonical reference would be Jeff Atwood's post on humor. Concerning questions, where SO is way more strict than answers, he gives three criteria:

  1. Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?

  2. Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?

  3. Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?

And then concludes

As Meat Loaf once said, two out of three ain't bad. It's guideline #3 that ends up being the pivotal decision in most borderline cases.

Applying thisabove to this answer: it is accepted by the community (1520 upvotes) and it teaches something ....

Seems like a clear accept.

A canonical reference would be Jeff Atwood's post on humor. Concerning questions, where SO is way more strict than answers, he gives three criteria:

  1. Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?

  2. Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?

  3. Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?

And then concludes

As Meat Loaf once said, two out of three ain't bad. It's guideline #3 that ends up being the pivotal decision in most borderline cases.

Applying this to this answer: it is accepted by the community (1520 upvotes) and it teaches something ....

Seems like a clear accept.

A canonical reference would be Jeff Atwood's post on humor. Concerning questions, where SO is way more strict than answers, he gives three criteria:

  1. Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?

  2. Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?

  3. Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?

And then concludes

As Meat Loaf once said, two out of three ain't bad. It's guideline #3 that ends up being the pivotal decision in most borderline cases.

Applying above to this answer: it is accepted by the community (1520 upvotes) and it teaches something ....

Seems like a clear accept.

Source Link
serv-inc
  • 38k
  • 15
  • 13

A canonical reference would be Jeff Atwood's post on humor. Concerning questions, where SO is way more strict than answers, he gives three criteria:

  1. Does this question match the criteria provided in the Stack Overflow FAQ?

  2. Is this question accepted by the community, as reflected in upvotes, favorites, views, and answers?

  3. Does this question teach me anything that could make me better at my job? Can I learn something from it?

And then concludes

As Meat Loaf once said, two out of three ain't bad. It's guideline #3 that ends up being the pivotal decision in most borderline cases.

Applying this to this answer: it is accepted by the community (1520 upvotes) and it teaches something ....

Seems like a clear accept.