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###For the person who asks the question

For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes / updated information.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

###For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes / updated information.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes / updated information.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

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###For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes / updated information.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. This would tell them that they may want to keep reading. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

###For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes / updated information.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. This would tell them that they may want to keep reading. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

###For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes / updated information.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

added 14 characters in body
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###For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not quickly realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes / updated information.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. This would tell them that they may want to keep reading. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

###For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not quickly realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. This would tell them that they may want to keep reading. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

###For the person who asks the question

I understand it can be complicated when a question is very active since this can change often, but in terms of the UX that should not be a problem (e.g. it could be based on a threshold, or difference, or simply wait for some time window, if truly needed, before notifying you).

At a minimum I think the person who asks the question may want to know that another answer is really the one people are finding most useful over time. It can also help others who quickly read the accepted answer but may not realize that there is another answer with possibly many more votes / updated information.

For readers

SO could also FYI readers in the accepted answer itself e.g. with a flag or icon, that the accepted answer is not the most voted one. This would tell them that they may want to keep reading. Moreover, that icon could even have a link that scrolls to that most voted answer.

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