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If I am a newbie in a language and spent a lot of time figuring out an experienced person's answer, how should I communicate this learning to other newbies?

Example: Trevor Sullivan's PowerShell regexp answeranswer took me a couple hours to work through. Once I understood it, it was useful, so I want to help other PowerShell newbies understand what it's doing. If it was my code, I would add code comments explaining each code line (that's how little PowerShell I know), but that doesn't seem right if it's not my code. I added a (Stack Overflow) comment to the answer explaining what I figured out. Is that the right way to handle this?

If I am a newbie in a language and spent a lot of time figuring out an experienced person's answer, how should I communicate this learning to other newbies?

Example: Trevor Sullivan's PowerShell regexp answer took me a couple hours to work through. Once I understood it, it was useful, so I want to help other PowerShell newbies understand what it's doing. If it was my code, I would add code comments explaining each code line (that's how little PowerShell I know), but that doesn't seem right if it's not my code. I added a (Stack Overflow) comment to the answer explaining what I figured out. Is that the right way to handle this?

If I am a newbie in a language and spent a lot of time figuring out an experienced person's answer, how should I communicate this learning to other newbies?

Example: Trevor Sullivan's PowerShell regexp answer took me a couple hours to work through. Once I understood it, it was useful, so I want to help other PowerShell newbies understand what it's doing. If it was my code, I would add code comments explaining each code line (that's how little PowerShell I know), but that doesn't seem right if it's not my code. I added a (Stack Overflow) comment to the answer explaining what I figured out. Is that the right way to handle this?

linked to answer instead of question; edited tags (tag:comments is for Stack Overflow comments)
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Glorfindel
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Is it OK for a newbie to insert code comments into code submitted by an experienced answerer?

If I am a newbie in a language and spent a lot of time figuring out an experienced person's answer, how should I communicate this learning to other newbies?

Example: Trevor Sullivan's PowerShell regexp answeranswer took me a couple hours to work through. Once I understood it, it was useful, so I want to help other PowerShell newbies understand what it's doing. If it was my code, I would add code comments explaining each code line (that's how little PowerShell I know), but that doesn't seem right if it's not my code. I added a SO(Stack Overflow) comment to the answer explaining what I figured out. Is that the right way to handle this?

Is it OK for a newbie to insert code comments into code submitted by experienced answerer?

If I am a newbie in a language and spent a lot of time figuring out an experienced person's answer, how should I communicate this learning to other newbies?

Example: Trevor Sullivan's PowerShell regexp answer took me a couple hours to work through. Once I understood it, it was useful, so I want to help other PowerShell newbies understand what it's doing. If it was my code, I would add code comments explaining each code line (that's how little PowerShell I know), but that doesn't seem right if it's not my code. I added a SO comment to the answer explaining what I figured out. Is that the right way to handle this?

Is it OK for a newbie to insert code comments into code submitted by an experienced answerer?

If I am a newbie in a language and spent a lot of time figuring out an experienced person's answer, how should I communicate this learning to other newbies?

Example: Trevor Sullivan's PowerShell regexp answer took me a couple hours to work through. Once I understood it, it was useful, so I want to help other PowerShell newbies understand what it's doing. If it was my code, I would add code comments explaining each code line (that's how little PowerShell I know), but that doesn't seem right if it's not my code. I added a (Stack Overflow) comment to the answer explaining what I figured out. Is that the right way to handle this?

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KAE
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Is it OK for a newbie to insert code comments into code submitted by experienced answerer?

If I am a newbie in a language and spent a lot of time figuring out an experienced person's answer, how should I communicate this learning to other newbies?

Example: Trevor Sullivan's PowerShell regexp answer took me a couple hours to work through. Once I understood it, it was useful, so I want to help other PowerShell newbies understand what it's doing. If it was my code, I would add code comments explaining each code line (that's how little PowerShell I know), but that doesn't seem right if it's not my code. I added a SO comment to the answer explaining what I figured out. Is that the right way to handle this?