Skip to main content
added 2 characters in body
Source Link

I've often seen users post answers that don't bring a new solution to the question asked, but simply calculate the time performance of other answers.

Answers like:

I ran multiple iterations of all other and answers and found that SomeUser's answer was the fastest

>>> %timeit def solutionUser1()
10000 loops, best of 3: 29.6 µs per loop

>>> %timeit def solutionUser2()
10000 loops, best of 3: 37.8 µs per loop

Here is an example: Interweaving two numpy arraysHow can I check for NaN values?

I am of the opinion that they should be flagged as "Not an answer", especially when OP was not asking about the most optimal solution in terms of time performance.

I've often seen users post answers that don't bring a new solution to the question asked, but simply calculate the time performance of other answers.

Answers like:

I ran multiple iterations of all other and answers and found that SomeUser's answer was the fastest

>>> %timeit def solutionUser1()
10000 loops, best of 3: 29.6 µs per loop

>>> %timeit def solutionUser2()
10000 loops, best of 3: 37.8 µs per loop

Here is an example: Interweaving two numpy arrays

I am of the opinion that they should be flagged as "Not an answer", especially when OP was not asking about the most optimal solution in terms of time performance.

I've often seen users post answers that don't bring a new solution to the question asked, but simply calculate the time performance of other answers.

Answers like:

I ran multiple iterations of all other and answers and found that SomeUser's answer was the fastest

>>> %timeit def solutionUser1()
10000 loops, best of 3: 29.6 µs per loop

>>> %timeit def solutionUser2()
10000 loops, best of 3: 37.8 µs per loop

Here is an example: How can I check for NaN values?

I am of the opinion that they should be flagged as "Not an answer", especially when OP was not asking about the most optimal solution in terms of time performance.

added 14 characters in body
Source Link
Donald Duck
  • 8.8k
  • 4
  • 37
  • 59

I've often seen users post answers that don't bring a new solution to the question asked, but simply calculate the time performance of other answers.

Answers like:

I ran multiple iterations of all other and answers and found that SomeUser's answer was the fastest

>>> %timeit def solutionUser1()
10000 loops, best of 3: 29.6 µs per loop

>>> %timeit def solutionUser2()
10000 loops, best of 3: 37.8 µs per loop
>>> %timeit def solutionUser1()
10000 loops, best of 3: 29.6 µs per loop

>>> %timeit def solutionUser2()
10000 loops, best of 3: 37.8 µs per loop

Here is an example: Interweaving two numpy arrays

I am of the opinion that they should be flagged as "Not an answer", especially when OP was not asking about the most optimal solution in terms of time performance.

I've often seen users post answers that don't bring a new solution to the question asked, but simply calculate the time performance of other answers.

Answers like:

I ran multiple iterations of all other and answers and found that SomeUser's answer was the fastest

>>> %timeit def solutionUser1()
10000 loops, best of 3: 29.6 µs per loop

>>> %timeit def solutionUser2()
10000 loops, best of 3: 37.8 µs per loop

Here is an example: Interweaving two numpy arrays

I am of the opinion that they should be flagged as "Not an answer", especially when OP was not asking about the most optimal solution in terms of time performance.

I've often seen users post answers that don't bring a new solution to the question asked, but simply calculate the time performance of other answers.

Answers like:

I ran multiple iterations of all other and answers and found that SomeUser's answer was the fastest

>>> %timeit def solutionUser1()
10000 loops, best of 3: 29.6 µs per loop

>>> %timeit def solutionUser2()
10000 loops, best of 3: 37.8 µs per loop

Here is an example: Interweaving two numpy arrays

I am of the opinion that they should be flagged as "Not an answer", especially when OP was not asking about the most optimal solution in terms of time performance.

edited tags
Link
duplode
  • 34.3k
  • 9
  • 64
  • 108
Became Hot Meta Post
fix title to reflect the question more accurately - "time complexity" is a specific term with a different meaning.
Link
Karl Knechtel
  • 61.2k
  • 4
  • 153
  • 255
Loading
Source Link
Loading