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replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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I salute the idea. One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

I'm posting this because this happened to me, and I was glad that someone else's mistake was pointed out and dissected, so that I wouldn't attempt to repeat it. I wish I had kept the bookmark. (Had I done so, I would have posted it here: Request for good examples of heavily downvoted answers that are worth keeping on the siteRequest for good examples of heavily downvoted answers that are worth keeping on the site)


  

Addendum: Some have argued that such answers shouldn't be left lying around, but rather rewritten as direct "don't do this because XYZ" answers, or merged into other, better answers, such that the valuable information they contain is better presented. That's a point worth discussing, but it is orthogonal to the question being discussed here i.e. it doesn't depend on auto-deletion. Also note that once the original answer is auto-deleted, it's harder to do those things; and in the meantime most users can't see the cautionary remarks.

I salute the idea. One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

I'm posting this because this happened to me, and I was glad that someone else's mistake was pointed out and dissected, so that I wouldn't attempt to repeat it. I wish I had kept the bookmark. (Had I done so, I would have posted it here: Request for good examples of heavily downvoted answers that are worth keeping on the site)


 

Addendum: Some have argued that such answers shouldn't be left lying around, but rather rewritten as direct "don't do this because XYZ" answers, or merged into other, better answers, such that the valuable information they contain is better presented. That's a point worth discussing, but it is orthogonal to the question being discussed here i.e. it doesn't depend on auto-deletion. Also note that once the original answer is auto-deleted, it's harder to do those things; and in the meantime most users can't see the cautionary remarks.

I salute the idea. One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

I'm posting this because this happened to me, and I was glad that someone else's mistake was pointed out and dissected, so that I wouldn't attempt to repeat it. I wish I had kept the bookmark. (Had I done so, I would have posted it here: Request for good examples of heavily downvoted answers that are worth keeping on the site)

 

Addendum: Some have argued that such answers shouldn't be left lying around, but rather rewritten as direct "don't do this because XYZ" answers, or merged into other, better answers, such that the valuable information they contain is better presented. That's a point worth discussing, but it is orthogonal to the question being discussed here i.e. it doesn't depend on auto-deletion. Also note that once the original answer is auto-deleted, it's harder to do those things; and in the meantime most users can't see the cautionary remarks.

added 567 characters in body
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I salute the idea. One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

I'm posting this because this happened to me, and I was glad that someone else's mistake was pointed out and dissected, so that I wouldn't attempt to repeat it. I wish I had kept the bookmark. (Had I done so, I would have posted it here: Request for good examples of heavily downvoted answers that are worth keeping on the site)


Addendum: Some have argued that such answers shouldn't be left lying around, but rather rewritten as direct "don't do this because XYZ" answers, or merged into other, better answers, such that the valuable information they contain is better presented. That's a point worth discussing, but it is orthogonal to the question being discussed here i.e. it doesn't depend on auto-deletion. Also note that once the original answer is auto-deleted, it's harder to do those things; and in the meantime most users can't see the cautionary remarks.

One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

I'm posting this because this happened to me, and I was glad that someone else's mistake was pointed out, so that I wouldn't attempt to repeat it. I wish I had kept the bookmark.

I salute the idea. One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

I'm posting this because this happened to me, and I was glad that someone else's mistake was pointed out and dissected, so that I wouldn't attempt to repeat it. I wish I had kept the bookmark. (Had I done so, I would have posted it here: Request for good examples of heavily downvoted answers that are worth keeping on the site)


Addendum: Some have argued that such answers shouldn't be left lying around, but rather rewritten as direct "don't do this because XYZ" answers, or merged into other, better answers, such that the valuable information they contain is better presented. That's a point worth discussing, but it is orthogonal to the question being discussed here i.e. it doesn't depend on auto-deletion. Also note that once the original answer is auto-deleted, it's harder to do those things; and in the meantime most users can't see the cautionary remarks.

added 81 characters in body
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One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

I'm posting this because this happened to me, and I was glad that someone else's mistake was pointed out, so that I wouldn't attempt to repeat it. I wish I had kept the bookmark.

One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

One possible concern is that it would kill "involuntary cautionary tale" answers, i.e. answers that present a prima facie plausible solution that would seem obvious to many, but which, upon closer inspection by other users, is highly inadvisable. Such answers typically end up heavily downvoted, often with a trail of cautionary comments. They then serve as a useful warning sign of what NOT to do. Vacuuming them could remove this useful information.

Typically there will also be a great answer that shows the right way to do it. But it's arguably useful to also point out the wrong way. Sure, you can see the good answer, but you might think, "No, I know, there's an easier way!" And then proceed to implement the bad solution you just came up with, unaware that there are reasons not to do this (and that you're not the first one to come up with this bad solution).

I'm posting this because this happened to me, and I was glad that someone else's mistake was pointed out, so that I wouldn't attempt to repeat it. I wish I had kept the bookmark.

clarified answer
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