I asked a question that got a response that worked for the answerer who was not using the most recent version of the r package. Since bugs were fixed for functionality in the new version, I need to have the newest version installed.
I also noticed that, though I included the full object I was working with, the answer included syntax that was evidence that he did not use the exact object I linked.
Nevertheless, I thought the post showed some effort, so I gave him the courtesy of not downvoting him. I thanked him for his effort in the comments. He responded that comments weren't a place to thank people and that I should give him an upvote if I was so thankful. Then downvoted my question.
My question is this: should I upvote him simply for showing effort, though he made two mistakes that result in his code not even running, and that could not be salvaged (other than to use an outdated version of the package)?
I'm not concerned with his downvote abuse here, just asking about an aspect of upvoting.
(He deleted his comment on my question; originally saying that I should explain how to use the package, and what version I was using)
round()
ed those numbers, but a half page is reasonable for a data table that must have a few series over a decent chunk of time imo. And someone coming across my post a year from now that finds a trivial function in the newest version should add an answer, citing the new version. They would be the ones to explain the version issue. That would help future users better.