Are answers that only include (formatted) citations from other sources allowed on Stack Overflow?
For example, can I write that "I found the following explanation from source X to be helpful" and then proceed to quote the explanation?
Are answers that only include (formatted) citations from other sources allowed on Stack Overflow?
For example, can I write that "I found the following explanation from source X to be helpful" and then proceed to quote the explanation?
Yes, provided that you follow our attribution requirements—which consist of clearly indicating all copied content, including the name of the original author (if available), and linking to the original source—such answers are allowed. (If you don't follow all of the attribution requirements, then such answers are essentially plagiarism and are therefore not allowed.)
However, as it says in the above-linked Help Center article, such answers are discouraged. We prefer answers to be your own original work, contributing something new to this site specifically, not just copying something entirely from somewhere else.
If you post such "quote-only" answers on rare occasion, because a complete answer already exists somewhere else, then it is surely not a problem and just helps to make our knowledge base more complete. If you become akin to a bot that merely copies content from elsewhere, that's problematic.
Note that even if you find the complete answer somewhere else that can be copied (with proper attribution), surely there is still something you can add on top of it, whether it's a more direct tie-in to the question that was asked, or some code demonstrating its use, or even just a description of your own relevant experiences.
What value do you really add by just quoting someone? Why not showcase what it was that they did in such a way that a user who sees this could more readily apply it so that they gain value?
I would not say that just quoting someone would be acceptable as a good answer.
can I write that "I found the following explanation from source X to be helpful" and then proceed to quote the explanation?
There are many ways to contextualize quotes. Please consider some or all of these:
Why was the quote helpful for you? Why do you expect it to be helpful for OP?
How does the quote apply? Does it directly engage with the question? Does it clear up a misconception underlying the question? Does it explain how to think about the problem? Something else?
Why did you choose this quote, rather than anything else on the same page?
What are you trying to get at with this wording?
How does the explanation apply to OP's circumstance? If the technique, workaround etc. described is applied to the OP's MRE, what does the result look like?
What are the most important aspects of the quote? (After trimming the quote appropriately and formatting it to look more like the original page, consider adding your own formatting for emphasis, and explain which emphasis is yours.)