First and foremost, I want to clarify that I am mostly interested in how to ask this question, so that I get the kind of answer I want. I have the feeling the compiler warning the question was about is not as innocent as a simple style preference. So I want to know how the original question was unclear, and how any of my edits could be perceived as changing the question.
I asked a question on the main site, and in every version of the question, the main question boiled down to
What does "The corresponding then clause does not complete normally" mean?
That wording is in every version of the question, is referencing an explicit compiler warning, and (I thought) is obviously a technical question. The question explicitly states this was a compiler warning output. A good answer, therefor, should have references to either documentation, or examples as to why this compiler warning exists.
I asked a couple more questions with the intent to reinforce the fact that I want a technical answer. Here is the full question statement...
So in all, What does "The corresponding then clause does not complete normally" mean? Does this affect code execution, or is it simply a formatting preference? If this isn't just a cosmetic issue, then what are the risk/side effects?
Apparently, there was ambiguity, and I got this answer, which started a small edit war as I tried to make the question more clear. Since that answer gave no support for it's 1 line technical argument, and then went on to talking about style, I feel it never really answered the question for any version of it (but was still related enough to qualify as an answer). The very last question, asking for possible non-style problems with this warning, very explicitly makes style arguments not an answer (I thought).
Here is the question, and its timeline.
So, what part of this question made it sound like anything other than a purely technical issue?
if/else
exits the function with areturn
and other other does not thus theif/else
construct does not complete normally since the method ends before executing all the possible code." This reads like the exact answer to your question to me. Yes, the answerer added more information, in an attempt to make their answer more useful to future users as well. If that line does not answer your question... Then you really do have some clarifying to do, I just can't begin to say what.