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Laurel
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I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and (probably) no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP.*
  2. The only time an edit will trigger a notification is when it's yournotify anyone who followed the post. Maybe OP followed the post being edited by someone else(you have no way of knowing), but most people don't follow many posts.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.


* Note that getting accepted does NOT prevent deletion:

moderators are not restricted from deleting accepted answers... And neither are 20K users.

I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP.*
  2. The only time an edit will trigger a notification is when it's your post being edited by someone else.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.


* Note that getting accepted does NOT prevent deletion:

moderators are not restricted from deleting accepted answers... And neither are 20K users.

I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and (probably) no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP.*
  2. The edit will notify anyone who followed the post. Maybe OP followed the post (you have no way of knowing), but most people don't follow many posts.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.


* Note that getting accepted does NOT prevent deletion:

moderators are not restricted from deleting accepted answers... And neither are 20K users.

replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP.*
  2. The only time an edit will trigger a notification is when it's your post being edited by someone else.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.


  

* Note that getting accepted does NOT prevent deletiondoes NOT prevent deletion:

moderators are not restricted from deleting accepted answers... And neither are 20K users.

I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP.*
  2. The only time an edit will trigger a notification is when it's your post being edited by someone else.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.


 

* Note that getting accepted does NOT prevent deletion:

moderators are not restricted from deleting accepted answers... And neither are 20K users.

I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP.*
  2. The only time an edit will trigger a notification is when it's your post being edited by someone else.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.

 

* Note that getting accepted does NOT prevent deletion:

moderators are not restricted from deleting accepted answers... And neither are 20K users.

added 114 characters in body
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Laurel
  • 6.2k
  • 13
  • 166
  • 231

I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP. (Moderators can delete an accepted answer, but it's not something that they would do in this case.)*
  2. The only time an edit will trigger a notification is when it's your post being edited by someone else.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.


* Note that getting accepted does NOT prevent deletion:

moderators are not restricted from deleting accepted answers... And neither are 20K users.

I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP. (Moderators can delete an accepted answer, but it's not something that they would do in this case.)
  2. The only time an edit will trigger a notification is when it's your post being edited by someone else.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.

I think you're a little too worried about this.

Will my green tick be deleted automatically by the web site (system), because I modified my answer and will a new message be sent to the questioner?

The answer to this is no and no:

  1. The only one who can un-accept an answer is the OP.*
  2. The only time an edit will trigger a notification is when it's your post being edited by someone else.

Of course, an edit will bump the post, so everyone browsing the active tab will see that you edited it. And anyone on the page can see when the last edit was. If they click on the revision history, they will be able to see what you changed.

Realistically, nobody cares enough to do that. In fact, it's likely that the OP doesn't care, either. As long as your edit improves the answer, you shouldn't feel guilty about it.

If you really want to preserve the content that your answer originally had, you can simply add the changes at the end of the post.


* Note that getting accepted does NOT prevent deletion:

moderators are not restricted from deleting accepted answers... And neither are 20K users.

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Laurel
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