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Peter Mortensen
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Self-answered question where the problem came from a framework; should I put a link to the opened githubGitHub issues?

Basically, the other day, I asked a question on SOStack Overflow about an unusual behaviour when coding in TypeScript using Angular.

After a few days of searching deeper, I realised the problem came from Angular itself, so I decided to self-answer my question, by giving the steps to reproduce (and the steps to make it work), after which I went on GithubGitHub and opened an issue on the Angular/Angular CLI project.

Should I include the links to the opened issues in my answer, or isn't it necessary?

Self-answered question where the problem came from a framework; should I put a link to the opened github issues?

Basically, the other day, I asked a question on SO about an unusual behaviour when coding in TypeScript using Angular.

After a few days of searching deeper, I realised the problem came from Angular itself, so I decided to self-answer my question, by giving the steps to reproduce (and the steps to make it work), after which I went on Github and opened an issue on the Angular/Angular CLI project.

Should I include the links to the opened issues in my answer, or isn't it necessary?

Self-answered question where the problem came from a framework; should I put a link to the opened GitHub issues?

Basically, the other day, I asked a question on Stack Overflow about an unusual behaviour when coding in TypeScript using Angular.

After a few days of searching deeper, I realised the problem came from Angular itself, so I decided to self-answer my question, by giving the steps to reproduce (and the steps to make it work), after which I went on GitHub and opened an issue on the Angular/Angular CLI project.

Should I include the links to the opened issues in my answer, or isn't it necessary?

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Clockwork
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Self-answered question where the problem came from a framework; should I put a link to the opened github issues?

Basically, the other day, I asked a question on SO about an unusual behaviour when coding in TypeScript using Angular.

After a few days of searching deeper, I realised the problem came from Angular itself, so I decided to self-answer my question, by giving the steps to reproduce (and the steps to make it work), after which I went on Github and opened an issue on the Angular/Angular CLI project.

Should I include the links to the opened issues in my answer, or isn't it necessary?