On this particular question I saw a behavior that although it wasn't inherently and obviously bad, looked slightly fishy to me and wanted to know if there was some sort of policy or community-adopted attitude about.
User asks a question about the use of mysqli_
in php. The problem for the user was very simple: they forgot or didn't know to write a necessary statement.
Another user with a very high rep comes around, and answers the question, but not in a particularly useful way, in my opinion: suggests to use a different approach instead mysqli_
without explaining or answering what's wrong with the OP code, or really addressing his problem; and links to his own site in his answer.
His answer gets downvoted, and the OP comments "this is not an answer to my question" (and fairly enough, it wasn't).
I get on with posting an answer, first the typical one liner ("you forgot this statement"), then a follow up edit with the amended code, and some additional commentary.
By the time I finish my edit I see that the first answerer closed the question as a duplicate directly (more than enough rep to do it by himself).
Recapping:
- Answer that doesn't deal directly with the OP's problem, but that does link to a personal resource.
- Gets downvote and rejection
- Closes question and leave unhelpful answer in place.
Again, maybe this is perfectly normal, proper and fair; and I shouldn't bring it up at all.
But seems weird that a user with all this experience wouldn't directly see that this answer had probably a more specific question/problem that could describe it. If we are going to close down directly all the questions that could be indirectly answered by something else on Stack Overflow, very little would pass unscathed.
And simply linking to a duplicate and closing is many times unhelpful: considering the difference in code style between this question and the duplicate, the details the OP provided, I thought that it did merit an answer.
Obviously this user thought so as well, since he provided an answer quick enough. Even if not really addressing the OP's concern.
But then closed the question very quickly, but didn't think that removal of his own answer was apropos.
Oh, and I had my answer downvoted in the process. Not by the OP, whom accepted and upvoted. But by someone else. Which in this whole thing, seemed strangely coincidental.
Is all this ok? Encouraged? Frowned up upon? Working as intended?