Yesterday I flagged this answer as NAA because it looked link-only to me, and I was NOT surprised to see it's declined. (Yeah, flagging these old upvoted answers makes me feel absolutely normal to have those flags declined - I'm used to it.)
The answer contains no more than merely a "link title" and the link:
[GNU `make' manual, 6.8: Defining Multi-Line Variables][1] [1]: http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.html#Multi_002dLine
(source)
To me, that's a link to a site that's unlikely to ever go down or become otherwise available (stub link), but should that affect the judgment of a link-only answer (LOA)? Please see "Update" below.
Update: Why I think it's LOA
Why I think it's LOA
As Cody Gray said in comments:
... The link text tells you exactly where to find the information, down to the section number and exact title in the manual. ...
IMO, Stack Overflow requires answers to be self-contained. The answer, to me, is only a link, or strictly speaking, two - one HTML link, one general link.
The answer could be rewritten as below with the precise meaning and content:
You can find the answer in GNU `make' manual, 6.8: Defining Multi-Line Variables
Here's a link to it: http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.html#Multi_002dLine
The link text in the original answer is the first paragraph in the rewritten answer. According to Shog9's visualization of LOA, it's not an answer - it's a direction to an answer:
The second part, the real link, the HTML link, is per se link-only.
Therefore, the answer contains no direct information at all. It contains no more than two directions to find an answer - one real link, one text direction telling readers where to find. It is NAA by definition.
Then the argument turns into: