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##Not an answer vs Very low quality flags

Not an answer vs Very low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'very low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

##Declining flags

Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

When a person flags many answers to one question as 'not an answer', often in the case when the question asks for an offsite resource. I will tend to decline those flags to push the flagger towards flagging the question for closure instead. Often they are answering the question, but the whole question and answers need to be deleted. My view is, it's about getting rubbish off the site as easily as possible. Raising multiple flags to achieve something that could be done with one flag is time wasting.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

##Handling the flag by deleting the question

Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

##Not an answer vs Very low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'very low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

##Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

When a person flags many answers to one question as 'not an answer', often in the case when the question asks for an offsite resource. I will tend to decline those flags to push the flagger towards flagging the question for closure instead. Often they are answering the question, but the whole question and answers need to be deleted. My view is, it's about getting rubbish off the site as easily as possible. Raising multiple flags to achieve something that could be done with one flag is time wasting.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

##Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

Not an answer vs Very low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'very low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

When a person flags many answers to one question as 'not an answer', often in the case when the question asks for an offsite resource. I will tend to decline those flags to push the flagger towards flagging the question for closure instead. Often they are answering the question, but the whole question and answers need to be deleted. My view is, it's about getting rubbish off the site as easily as possible. Raising multiple flags to achieve something that could be done with one flag is time wasting.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

added 10 characters in body
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Bhargav Rao Mod
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##Not an answer vs Very low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'low'very low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

##Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

When a person flags many answers to one question as 'not an answer', often in the case when the question asks for an offsite resource. I will tend to decline those flags to push the flagger towards flagging the question for closure instead. Often they are answering the question, but the whole question and answers need to be deleted. My view is, it's about getting rubbish off the site as easily as possible. Raising multiple flags to achieve something that could be done with one flag is time wasting.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

##Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

##Not an answer vs low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

##Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

When a person flags many answers to one question as 'not an answer', often in the case when the question asks for an offsite resource. I will tend to decline those flags to push the flagger towards flagging the question for closure instead. Often they are answering the question, but the whole question and answers need to be deleted. My view is, it's about getting rubbish off the site as easily as possible. Raising multiple flags to achieve something that could be done with one flag is time wasting.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

##Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

##Not an answer vs Very low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'very low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

##Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

When a person flags many answers to one question as 'not an answer', often in the case when the question asks for an offsite resource. I will tend to decline those flags to push the flagger towards flagging the question for closure instead. Often they are answering the question, but the whole question and answers need to be deleted. My view is, it's about getting rubbish off the site as easily as possible. Raising multiple flags to achieve something that could be done with one flag is time wasting.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

##Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

added 508 characters in body
Source Link
user3956566
user3956566

##Not an answer vs low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

##Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

When a person flags many answers to one question as 'not an answer', often in the case when the question asks for an offsite resource. I will tend to decline those flags to push the flagger towards flagging the question for closure instead. Often they are answering the question, but the whole question and answers need to be deleted. My view is, it's about getting rubbish off the site as easily as possible. Raising multiple flags to achieve something that could be done with one flag is time wasting.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

##Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

##Not an answer vs low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

##Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

##Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

##Not an answer vs low quality flags

There's so much confusion about these two flags, I treat them identically note. For a flag on a post like this, I wouldn't decline the flag. The answer is basically a link to a framework. Yes, the framework is an answer, but it is low quality as it stands and should be a comment as a hint to the OP. If an answer is flagged as 'not an answer' and is 'low quality', I mark the flag as helpful and vice versa. Working on the premise that the flagger is acting in good faith and trying to communicate that it's a lousy answer.

##Declining flags

I don't subscribe to following the 'letter of the law' when handling flags, but rather the 'spirit of the law'. Everyone volunteers their time on here and if people are attempting to curate the site, it's better to support them in how to do this, without being too officious about it. It's a problem on the site and in society generally, that I suspect is a part of human nature.

When a person flags many answers to one question as 'not an answer', often in the case when the question asks for an offsite resource. I will tend to decline those flags to push the flagger towards flagging the question for closure instead. Often they are answering the question, but the whole question and answers need to be deleted. My view is, it's about getting rubbish off the site as easily as possible. Raising multiple flags to achieve something that could be done with one flag is time wasting.

I decline flags for one reason:

To teach people how to flag effectively.

If the flag serves the same purpose, by bumping the post into the review queues or the mod queue for possibly deletion and should ultimately be deleted, I mark the flag as helpful. If the post shouldn't be deleted, I decline it.

##Handling the flag by deleting the question

When handling answer flags I usually check the question, as it's not uncommon for poor answers to be posted under poor questions. It's important to treat the source.

Instead I would close and delete the question, as the question is too broad. Deleting the question would delete the answer and automatically mark the flag on the answer as helpful.

When deleting a question I generally leave a comment:

Please raise a mod flag to have your question undeleted if you edit it to be on topic. See How do I ask a good question?.

note
With the one exception that a low quality flag that is marked as helpful, automatically applies a downvote to the post.

added 44 characters in body
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