Skip to main content
added 112 characters in body
Source Link
Cody Gray Mod
  • 244.2k
  • 84
  • 721
  • 763

Those are technical objections. Those are not reasons to raise a NAA flag. Moderators do not judge the technical accuracy or correctness of answers. See here for what happens if you ask them to try. If you believe an answer is unclear, wrong, or not useful, then the correct course of action is to downvote it.

Those are technical objections. Those are not reasons to raise a NAA flag. Moderators do not judge the technical accuracy or correctness of answers. See here for what happens if you ask them to try.

Those are technical objections. Those are not reasons to raise a NAA flag. Moderators do not judge the technical accuracy or correctness of answers. See here for what happens if you ask them to try. If you believe an answer is unclear, wrong, or not useful, then the correct course of action is to downvote it.

Source Link
Cody Gray Mod
  • 244.2k
  • 84
  • 721
  • 763

[W]hat about posts that clearly does not attempt to answer the actual question and instead seem to answer a completely other question that was never asked?

Unfortunately, opinions vary.

When handling not-an-answer (NAA) flags, some moderators read the flagged answer without ever looking at the question. For these moderators, the flagged answer had better be obviously not even an attempt to answer the question. It's going to have to be something like, "I have the same question", "Thanks, this worked for me", or nonsense.

Other moderators (/raises hand) do evaluate NAA flags in the context of the question and will therefore delete answers that are obviously irrelevant to the question that was asked. For example, a NAA flag will get me to delete a C++ answer to a Python question. However, even for me, this has its limits. I cannot be a subject matter expert on all topics covered on Stack Overflow, so there are times when what might be obviously unrelated to someone familiar with the language/technology might look deceptively related to me, who knows nothing about it. In these cases, I (and others) may decline NAA flags on the basis that the answer looked like an attempt to answer the question.

I flagged this post as it doesn't contains anything that could be interpreted to even touch on an answer to the actual question…

Ahh…not exactly. This is a good example of a bad example. That is indeed C# code, and it does seem to be at least tangentially related to the subject of the question, which is the buffer size for the StreamWriter class. A moderator who isn't an expert could easily read that as an answer providing an alternative approach, working around some default buffer limit in the .NET Framework's built-in StreamWriter class. That would be a valid answer to the question, and it's not something that a moderator should be deleting.

… it was declined but instead deleted because the answer was copy-paste from a site with link.

Your NAA flag was declined because the moderator who reviewed the answer did think it was a valid attempt to answer the question. However, that moderator then noticed that the answer was copy-pasted from the linked page, without sufficient attribution. That is an independent reason to delete the answer, completely unrelated to your NAA flag.

If you want to bring plagiarism (lack of attribution) to moderator attention, then you need to raise a custom moderator flag (the option that gives you a textbox to type into), rather than a NAA flag. NAA flags don't indicate to moderators that we should look for plagiarism or other types of issues. They only indicate that we should delete the post because it isn't an attempt to answer the question.

But if this actually was an "answer", wouldn't it be perfectly fine to copy-paste example code from somewhere else and then add a link to the source?

No. It is only fine to do this if you provide proper attribution. That answer didn't. See also: more than you ever wanted to know about plagiarism.

I didn't comment on the flag since the answer already had an older explicit comment about that, but I'm now thinking that might have been a bad choice. Or had that mattered anyway?

NAA flags don't let you include any commentary. You'd need to raise a custom moderator flag if you'd wanted to include any sort of additional commentary for the moderators along with your flag. This is a good approach if you're trying to bring anything non-obvious to our attention.

But you reference a comment that the answer in question already had. That comment was this:

What is this? This doesn't answer the question "what is the default buffer size", nor do you explain what the point of your code is.

Those are technical objections. Those are not reasons to raise a NAA flag. Moderators do not judge the technical accuracy or correctness of answers. See here for what happens if you ask them to try.