This question on meta was asked on 15th May 2015 (on 2015-05-15 08:24:08Z
to be precise) and it has an answer from Christmas Eve 2014 from an anonymous user. Has a mod been playing around on meta perhaps?
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4meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/294365/revisions– apaulCommented May 17, 2015 at 23:00
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10Looks like an older post was merged with a newer one.– apaulCommented May 17, 2015 at 23:02
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3I found that older question a while after my own one caught traction, but was reluctant to close-vote my own question as a dupe because the other was a lot terser. So I flagged for a mod to help, which he/she kindly did by merging the questions.– JeroenCommented May 18, 2015 at 5:25
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2@Jeroen I admit it didn't occur to me to look at the revision history of the question. I agree with Mave's comment in the answer below though, perhaps some sort of merge indication would be useful here.– DavidGCommented May 18, 2015 at 9:29
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2alternate theory– Carrie KendallCommented May 20, 2015 at 16:33
1 Answer
When you see things like this it's usually the result of a merge. If you look at the revision history of that question (click on the "edited" time stamp link under the question), you'll see:
Post Merged (destination) from meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/281056/…
This means the answers from Why not including twitter bootstrap library in Code-Snippet [ ctrl + M ] were moved over to the newer question.
In this case it probably happened because Martijn felt the newer question had the better question, but the older one's answer was good enough that merging the two together was the most effective way to organize and present the information (with which I agree).
The fact that the user who answered is anonymous isn't actually related to this, it just so happens that the user doesn't currently have an account here for whatever reason.
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15This type of merge is confusing, specially for new users. Commented May 18, 2015 at 1:59
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64A notification inside the merged post saying "This post was merged from another question" wouldn't be amiss.– MaveCommented May 18, 2015 at 8:41
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9@Mave, the people who asked and answered the questions are informed via notifications. People who come across the question later don't really need to know it was merged so long as the answer matches the question. Commented May 19, 2015 at 8:21
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1@JamesWebster It's not so much the notification that is the issue, it's the confusion caused by the timeline. Also if the source question has the notification on it, why shouldn't the destination?– DavidGCommented May 19, 2015 at 10:06
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4@DavidG, The "confusion" about time stamps isn't much of a problem either. I rarely, if ever, compare the question time stamp to the answer time stamp. I pretty much look exclusively at the answer time to verify that it's up to date enough. The question time is often immaterial. Commented May 19, 2015 at 10:16
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3@JamesWebster Well it was enough to confuse me (and I'm a seasoned user) so how do you think a person new to the site would cope?– DavidGCommented May 19, 2015 at 10:18
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1Could we do the same to this question, so that this question about older answers is newer than this answer? Commented May 19, 2015 at 11:41
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Cool would be if comments could predate the answers/questions to which they are appended.– pgbluCommented May 19, 2015 at 11:58
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