I failed a review audit, because the answer looked good to me, even though it was a commercial product - https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/6882999.
My reasoning was that it was not a link only answer, because it gave some explanation of what it was linking against.
This was the question:
Address Split Formula
Any idea on how I can separate an address in Excel. Currently I have about 300 addresses that are in the flowing format:
[...]
This was the answer:
Another, commercial but better way is to use this Excel AddIn. It splits the address fields in seperate columns AND corrects (!!!) the data. See the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RYD_I9PwX8
To tell you the truth, I did hesitate whether to recommend deletion, but in the end I decided that it looked like the answer pointed to a tool that solves the problem in the question. True, it was commercial, and in today's world there seldom is a need to use a commercial library, but they still exist. And if a commercial tool is a valid way to solve the problem, then why not add it as an answer?
I'll describe my steps - first, I saw the answer talks about an excel addin that splits the address, disclosing that it is a commercial tool. I quickly looked up the question and saw that indeed asks how to do just that.
I wondered if I should delete it as "link-only answer (and not spam)", but decided that even though it has a link, it explains that this tool solves the problem in the question. I am not certain what the threshold for link-only answer is - should it have had a code sample showing how to use the addin, perhaps?
Also, since there is no spam reason, I didn't consider that at all as a reason to recommend deletion, at most I would have gone to the question and marked it as spam.
So what reasoning should I have applied here?
And should answers suggesting a commercial library that solves the problem be always deleted, without exceptions? I'm asking so that I know in the future.