I seem to be noticing a lot of answers now say "try this" or "you could try this" or something similar next to code example after some explanation text.
I'm probably being pedantic but these answers annoy me because the "try this" prefix seems to be a disclaimer to say "well it may or may not work I don't know", or "I'm haven't tested this", or "this is a just a guess but hey why not".
I'd rather an answer was an actual answer from a position of confidence rather than disclaiming responsibility for it by saying "You could try".
Note: this is not a duplicate of Reduce "try this" answers by giving a helpful message - that duplicate was focused on answers that are primarily code blocks. My objection is to "try this" in general. I think SO should look for "try this" in the text and ask that people use different words such as "this is not tested", or "I am guessing here", or perhaps if they are from a cultural background where people prefer to give suggestions rather than definitive factual answers, then a way could be found to explain that it is not appropriate to say "try this" because it reduces the quality of the answer by making it vague and uncertain. There are definitely other discussions on this topic as shown in the comments but some of them are years old, indicating that the issue isn't addressed. It must be a fairly easy one to address in code because "try this" is such a straightforward piece of text to identify.