It started with a reasonable question, e.g. given that lambdas were added to Java 8, what is the remaining feature gap between Java and Scala? Some answers were quite good, but one guy who apparently doesn't know or like Scala very much decided to "answer" the question in part by declaring some Scala features to be misfeatures that should be avoided. It was like a blog entry "What I Think of Scala After Four Months of Use."
I was absolutely horrified at this -- it is certainly not what I expect to find on StackOverflow, and if it were very common I would not use StackOverflow at all. I want facts; tell me what you actually know, but don't present your judgments -- particularly about things you don't understand -- as facts.
I wasn't the only one calling the author to task for that answer. But what made the situation worse is that this non-factual rant about his opinion of Scala managed to get a significant number of up-votes, probably from Java and Groovy programmers who haven't taken a shine to Scala. They are welcome to their opinions as well, but again, that kind of crap belongs on a blog and not on StackOverflow.
Right? I hope?
I handled it poorly, making a point of saying that I had never down-voted an answer before but I would this one because it reeked of personal bias. The author claimed that of course his answer was his opinion, that that was how StackOverflow worked -- we're all just giving our opinions. What??? I tried editing the most egregious instances of personal bias to say "in my opinion" so that at least someone actually using the page to decide whether or not to invest in Scala would have fair warning, but the author would not have it -- he backed out the edit and responded with hostility.
At that point I gave up, and eventually the question itself was closed as inviting biased answers. I think that's unfortunate -- the question is really a very good one, and important for people trying to choose which languages to invest in. It was just that this one guy couldn't resist the chance to blog his opinion. But my question is: How should I have handled this? Is there a way to flag an answer -- not a question -- for review and potential removal? Does a crappy answer really have to break the question?
For reference, the question/answer I'm talking about are
what is the remaining feature gap between Java and Scala?
That question is way too broad for SO. It's certainly not an appropriate question for this site.the question is [...] important for people trying to choose which languages to invest in.
That's not really something SO is well suited for at all. It's just not the place to try to figure out which language you should be learning. You appear to now have quite a bit of hands on experience as to why that is the case and why we work so hard to keep, "which language should I learn" questions off of the site; they don't end well.At that point I gave up, and eventually the question itself was closed as inviting biased answers