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I came across an answer that was a one-line suggestion to the OP and could have been a comment. When I attempted to explain this to the poster, they disagreed, so I raised a not-an-answer flag. Some time between the raising of the flag and when a moderator had a chance to look at it, the answer was expanded into a very nice explanation, so naturally the flag was rejected.

Would the moderator have been aware of the discrepancy in the posts we were looking at? Is there a way to reject a flag in a way that would not affect my reviewing ability at that point (i.e., can it be marked as disputed instead of declined)?

This is not a huge issue, but I can propose a couple of hypothetical solutions to it anyway:

  • A flag could be disputed instead of declined by default if enough change has occurred in the post between the raising and rejection of the flag.
  • A user be notified about significant edits to questions they flagged, and therefore have an opportunity to manually remove a flag if they see fit.
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    That an answer is short doesn't mean it's supposed to be a comment. Short answers are still answers, so it sounds like that flag would merit being declined even if the post wasn't edited. Comments are for clarification, not for short answers.
    – Servy
    Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 17:22
  • @gnat. That does answer approximately 90% of my question. Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 17:22
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    "affect my reviewing ability"? I'm not aware of connection between flagging and reviews (unless you manually banned by mods - but I'd guess you need to have half of flags declined to get noticed) Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 17:23
  • @Servy. I am aware of that, and I am not contesting the moderator's decision in this case, even though at the time I did think the flag was merited. I was mostly curious about how the system worked for things like that, and it appears that gnat has answered my question. Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 17:23
  • @AlexeiLevenkov. If you get enough flags declined in a short enough time, you get suspended from flagging for a little while. I think that qualifies. Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 17:24
  • I would like to close this as a dupe based on gnat's suggestion, but the answer is not on this meta. What is the correct procedure? Just deleting the question? Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 17:26
  • deletion is hardly the right thing. Even same-site duplicates aren't typically considered bad, and this is even more so for cross-site duplicates
    – gnat
    Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 17:41
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    Related: there's a feature request to add the post revision to the moderator flag review UI. Commented Feb 2, 2017 at 18:02
  • If it's edited through the review queue, then the flag is automatically validated. Otherwise, as was the case here, nothing changes, and moderators will probably decline the flag. See: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/317399/…
    – Cody Gray Mod
    Commented Feb 3, 2017 at 7:58
  • @MadPhysicist : then you forgot the rule to edit before flagging, obviously. Commented Feb 4, 2017 at 0:01
  • @user2284570 that rule does not apply when there is no meaningful content in a post to begin with. Commented Feb 4, 2017 at 3:27
  • @MadPhysicist : but you’re talking about case it can become. So, don’t close. Commented Feb 5, 2017 at 13:54

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