Timeline for Should I add an inferior solution to an answered question?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
15 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Aug 8 at 19:41 | comment | added | wim | We will have to agree to disagree on that Q&A. As for this meta answer, it offers excellent advice (upvoted, bookmarked) and I will be linking to it in future when I see new users "repackaging" existing answers instead of offering edits. | |
Aug 8 at 19:35 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | @wim disagreed; it gave performance results that were what I was explicitly soliciting (not previously available, and relevant to the question which specifically asked about performance), and attempted to explain those results. While I appreciated your attempt, overall I deemed the other one a) more substantive; b) sufficient to meet my expectations for the bounty. | |
Aug 8 at 18:41 | comment | added | wim | In Fastest way to remove first and last lines from a Python string you awarded +250 bounty to an answer which did not present any significantly novel analyses over existing answers. | |
Aug 8 at 7:35 | comment | added | fozzybear | Problem is, you rarely get much, if any credit for new solution approaches, if answering to older questions from my experience, which got out of focus. It seems more likely to get negative feedback and minus points for arguably noticeable formal issues, mostly even without any useful feedback, which is largely discouraging. | |
Aug 7 at 22:15 | comment | added | Matthew Read | And it is generally not OK to expand someone else's short and sweet answer into a long-form answer. Some edits may add some length and that's fine, but fundamentally changing the form and/or goal of an answer is frowned upon because it is changing the answer -- the message does change. This one is totally different from the other, even if they agree. | |
Aug 7 at 13:13 | comment | added | Gimby | No harm in having a short and sweet answer and "the manual". Different target audiences. | |
Aug 7 at 12:16 | comment | added | Karl Knechtel | FWIW, I think there's plenty of value in answers like MisterMiyagi's. I'm just... better at writing this kind. | |
Aug 7 at 7:37 | comment | added | LukasKroess | @VLAZ I changed the accepted answer from the previous one to this one to reward the form (/length) in which it was presented - with absolutely no disrespect to @MisterMiyagi! As I said: I genuinely appreciate all the feedback on this question and didn't want things to get heated, so I guess I'll leave it at this | |
Aug 7 at 7:26 | comment | added | VLAZ | @LukasKroess it contributes novel analysis. But it's even simpler than that - you're trying to say that if the core of two answers is the same, there is no difference. That's trivially provable to be false, as you've accepted this one, not the equivalent one. Suggesting you found some different value in this answer. The only other alternative is that you've flipped a coin for which one to choose, given there is no difference. But I sincerely doubt you flipped a coin. | |
Aug 7 at 7:07 | comment | added | user5349916 | This looks like a unique, good answer to me. Kudos for the demonstration. | |
Aug 7 at 6:35 | comment | added | LukasKroess | @VLAZ but "carrying the same message" in a meta question, is what I equated to "taking the same approach" in a non-meta / code related question. But I guess in non-code related discussions, we really must take the whole text as content, and not just take one core message and have the rest just be flavourtext | |
Aug 7 at 6:27 | comment | added | VLAZ | @LukasKroess while both answers try to carry the same message, they aren't really the same. MisterMiyagi's is short and to the point. Karl's offers points to consider when posting, with examples. | |
Aug 7 at 6:24 | vote | accept | LukasKroess | ||
Aug 7 at 6:23 | comment | added | LukasKroess | I am genuinly thankful for all the replies, comments and answers to this question and I would now consider this one the accepted answer BUT (and again: I honestly don't do this to start a fight, just for argument's sake) aren't you contradicting yourself by posting this answer when there was already this one: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/431176/3735561 As I have read them, both your answers could be boiled down to the same core message, that an answer should present a different approach to the existing answers. | |
Aug 6 at 20:00 | history | answered | Karl Knechtel | CC BY-SA 4.0 |