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TheMaster
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Is it considered poor practice to take a suggestion made by a vague (but objectively correct) answer, expand upon it, and then accept your own answer?

I'd say yes, in the case where the

  • "expanded" part was not part of the question and
  • where you're the original question author

Is it possible, that the answer only seemed vague to you because you were new?

If you think the community will benefit from the expanded answer, I think a better way is to ask a new question, which specifically asks for the "expanded" part of the question and answer it yourself.

The linked original answer is a bit controversial. The original answer only provided quotes of the documentation with links without much explanation. While that was sufficient for OP, a little flesh on that answer still would've gone a great way.

However, In general, Whenever your question had set a specific goal and there was a answer that met the goals, you cannot edit your question to change the goal post or answeradd a extra imaginary question in your mind and answer that imaginary question as your answer and accept it. I don't think that's ok.

Is it considered poor practice to take a suggestion made by a vague (but objectively correct) answer, expand upon it, and then accept your own answer?

I'd say yes, in the case where the

  • "expanded" part was not part of the question and
  • where you're the original question author

Is it possible, that the answer only seemed vague to you because you were new?

If you think the community will benefit from the expanded answer, I think a better way is to ask a new question, which specifically asks for the "expanded" part of the question and answer it yourself.

The linked original answer is a bit controversial. The original answer only provided quotes of the documentation with links without much explanation. While that was sufficient for OP, a little flesh on that answer still would've gone a great way.

However, In general, Whenever your question had set a specific goal and there was a answer that met the goals, you cannot edit your question to change the goal post or answer a extra imaginary question in your mind and answer that imaginary question as your answer.

Is it considered poor practice to take a suggestion made by a vague (but objectively correct) answer, expand upon it, and then accept your own answer?

I'd say yes, in the case where the

  • "expanded" part was not part of the question and
  • where you're the original question author

Is it possible, that the answer only seemed vague to you because you were new?

If you think the community will benefit from the expanded answer, I think a better way is to ask a new question, which specifically asks for the "expanded" part of the question and answer it yourself.

The linked original answer is a bit controversial. The original answer only provided quotes of the documentation with links without much explanation. While that was sufficient for OP, a little flesh on that answer still would've gone a great way.

However, In general, Whenever your question had set a specific goal and there was a answer that met the goals, you cannot edit your question to change the goal post or add a extra imaginary question in your mind and answer that imaginary question as your answer and accept it. I don't think that's ok.

added 524 characters in body
Source Link
TheMaster
  • 50.2k
  • 2
  • 27
  • 54

Is it considered poor practice to take a suggestion made by a vague (but objectively correct) answer, expand upon it, and then accept your own answer?

I'd say yes, in the case where the

  • "expanded" part was not part of the question and
  • where you're the original question author

Is it possible, that the answer only seemed vague to you because you were new?

If you think the community will benefit from the expanded answer, I think a better way is to ask a new question, which specifically asks for the "expanded" part of the question and answer it yourself.

The linked original answer is a bit controversial. The original answer only provided quotes of the documentation with links without much explanation. While that was sufficient for OP, a little flesh on that answer still would've gone a great way.

However, In general, Whenever your question had set a specific goal and there was a answer that met the goals, you cannot edit your question to change the goal post or answer a extra imaginary question in your mind and answer that imaginary question as your answer.

Is it considered poor practice to take a suggestion made by a vague (but objectively correct) answer, expand upon it, and then accept your own answer?

I'd say yes, in the case where the

  • "expanded" part was not part of the question and
  • where you're the original question author

Is it possible, that the answer only seemed vague to you because you were new?

If you think the community will benefit from the expanded answer, I think a better way is to ask a new question, which specifically asks for the "expanded" part of the question and answer it yourself.

Is it considered poor practice to take a suggestion made by a vague (but objectively correct) answer, expand upon it, and then accept your own answer?

I'd say yes, in the case where the

  • "expanded" part was not part of the question and
  • where you're the original question author

Is it possible, that the answer only seemed vague to you because you were new?

If you think the community will benefit from the expanded answer, I think a better way is to ask a new question, which specifically asks for the "expanded" part of the question and answer it yourself.

The linked original answer is a bit controversial. The original answer only provided quotes of the documentation with links without much explanation. While that was sufficient for OP, a little flesh on that answer still would've gone a great way.

However, In general, Whenever your question had set a specific goal and there was a answer that met the goals, you cannot edit your question to change the goal post or answer a extra imaginary question in your mind and answer that imaginary question as your answer.

Source Link
TheMaster
  • 50.2k
  • 2
  • 27
  • 54

Is it considered poor practice to take a suggestion made by a vague (but objectively correct) answer, expand upon it, and then accept your own answer?

I'd say yes, in the case where the

  • "expanded" part was not part of the question and
  • where you're the original question author

Is it possible, that the answer only seemed vague to you because you were new?

If you think the community will benefit from the expanded answer, I think a better way is to ask a new question, which specifically asks for the "expanded" part of the question and answer it yourself.