I have two high profile accepted answers in the #redis tag.
What is Redis and what do I use it for?
These both rank highly in google search results and are regularly upvoted despite their age. These two answers alone are responsible for probably most of my SO score.
They are dated and I'm not entirely happy with their format or content. I'd like to update them, but also think it would be good to completely re-write them, with a clearer summary at the top and expanding further into Redis within the answers.
However, I'm not sure how much change is appropriate. People upvoted the answers as they were and though I have updated them I've avoided making the changes drastic. It seems like a case could be made that a drastic change violates the intent of those upvotes. They are attached to the content, not to me personally, and who knows if those same up-voters would agree that my drastic re-write represents an improvement.
Are there SO guidelines for maintaining and improving high visibility answers like this? I thought I'd ask before I try to re-write these answers completely this weekend.
Defining "Drastic"
One of the posts recently received this comment.
what about some simple examples of use cases? and some simple examples of bad ideas to use with redis? 900 upvotes? really?
The commenter is not wrong.
I have no intention of changing the meaning, conclusion, or overall concept of the answers. My intention would be to have an expanded summary, with hopefully more readable but longer and more numerous sections beneath. Both posts don't mention new advances/features in redis and major shifts in the ecosystem, maturity, and adoption. The memcached v redis post in particular was written at a time when memcached still made some sense and had the larger install base and ecosystem. It would be good to re-write this comparison from a modern perspective so the reader has an honest understanding of the situation today, not some strange snapshot from 2012.