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But I don't feel these types of answers are appropriate, since they don't fully address/answer the question

I cannot make sense of this claim. Of course they do!

If the question is "how can I do x", and the answer is "you cannot do x, do y instead", then that is a perfectly reasonable answer. In fact, it's a good answer and should be upvoted. A mediocre answer would be simply "you can't do x". It is correct and answers the question as far as it goes, but it doesn't quite go far enough. What makes your example a good answer is that it goes on to propose a reasonable alternative. It cannot get any better than this. Beyond simply answering the question, you have solved the person's problem!

You either encourage answers like this, or you close and delete the entire question. Those are the only two options. Since there's no close reason for "not possible", the only reasonable conclusion is that these types of answers are acceptable.

Related: Should we encourage self-learners more?Should we encourage self-learners more? (coincidentally posted before I read your question)

But I don't feel these types of answers are appropriate, since they don't fully address/answer the question

I cannot make sense of this claim. Of course they do!

If the question is "how can I do x", and the answer is "you cannot do x, do y instead", then that is a perfectly reasonable answer. In fact, it's a good answer and should be upvoted. A mediocre answer would be simply "you can't do x". It is correct and answers the question as far as it goes, but it doesn't quite go far enough. What makes your example a good answer is that it goes on to propose a reasonable alternative. It cannot get any better than this. Beyond simply answering the question, you have solved the person's problem!

You either encourage answers like this, or you close and delete the entire question. Those are the only two options. Since there's no close reason for "not possible", the only reasonable conclusion is that these types of answers are acceptable.

Related: Should we encourage self-learners more? (coincidentally posted before I read your question)

But I don't feel these types of answers are appropriate, since they don't fully address/answer the question

I cannot make sense of this claim. Of course they do!

If the question is "how can I do x", and the answer is "you cannot do x, do y instead", then that is a perfectly reasonable answer. In fact, it's a good answer and should be upvoted. A mediocre answer would be simply "you can't do x". It is correct and answers the question as far as it goes, but it doesn't quite go far enough. What makes your example a good answer is that it goes on to propose a reasonable alternative. It cannot get any better than this. Beyond simply answering the question, you have solved the person's problem!

You either encourage answers like this, or you close and delete the entire question. Those are the only two options. Since there's no close reason for "not possible", the only reasonable conclusion is that these types of answers are acceptable.

Related: Should we encourage self-learners more? (coincidentally posted before I read your question)

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Cody Gray Mod
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But I don't feel these types of answers are appropriate, since they don't fully address/answer the question

I cannot make sense of this claim. Of course they do!

If the question is "how can I do x", and the answer is "you cannot do x, do y instead", then that is a perfectly reasonable answer. In fact, it's a good answer and should be upvoted. A mediocre answer would be simply "you can't do x". It is correct and answers the question as far as it goes, but it doesn't quite go far enough. What makes your example a good answer is that it goes on to propose a reasonable alternative. It cannot get any better than this. Beyond simply answering the question, you have solved the person's problem!

You either encourage answers like this, or you close and delete the entire question. Those are the only two options. Since there's no close reason for "not possible", the only reasonable conclusion is that these types of answers are acceptable.

Related: Should we encourage self-learners more? (coincidentally posted before I read your question)