I came across the question Redirect using AngularJS some time ago. It is a fairly popular question with a score of 78. For posterity, the question is asking for help creating a redirect using the AngularJS library. The question explictiy states that the code window.location = "#/route";
works, but they are specifically looking for a solution using the path()
function.
There is an answer on that question with a score of -3 whose entirety is:
just use
window.location = "your_url"
I flagged this as not an answer, because it does not answer the question, which explicitly includes this line as code as technically working but not desired. This flag was rejected because "flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer". Which I understand.
I then raised a flag seeking moderator attention, and explained that this answer does nothing other than waste users' time. People who are reading it have likely already read the original question and learned of the window.location
functionality. The answer has a score of -3 and provides almost negative value to the question itself. But the flag was declined for the same reason.
This is my exact flag text:
I already raised a "not an answer" flag that was declined, but I still feel this is detrimental to this answer. The Question contains this line of code and explicitly states that it works, but he wants a different solution. The code in this answer does work, and does solve the general problem, but I don't believe it's an answer to the question. I think people reading this answer will have wasted their time since the code is in the question.
My hope for a "Clutter" flag would be to remove answers like this that truly add no value to the knowledge gain provided by a particular question, and perhaps contribute negatively to the sites reputation (no one likes seeing negative scores).
Or at the very least, a discussion about what flag would be appropriate in this situation, or why I'm wrong, would be helpful as well.