Today I got this comment on a 2 year old answer of mine:
Can you please fix the english and punctuation errors? What does gray in the corner indicate? Why is its color lighter? What is 4x? Width of the lines in second second shape or total number of pixels in it ? And why didn't you just draw a line rather than intereection of two lines? What about orange rectanles? Although I know the concept very well, your drawings and shallow/complicated/missing writing confused me! Gosh my brain!
It's not the friendliest way to provide feedback. In fact, I more or less stopped after "Can you please fix the english and punctuation errors?" and just skimmed the rest of it. But it got me to re-read my answer and take a look at the illustrations in the original answer (which I felt was lacking but OK to begin with) and decided that I could come up with both a better explanation and better illustrations.
So I decided to rewrite the answer to really put that comment down.
As I was finished I realized that the new answer, while still talking about the same thing, was very different from the old one. So my question is:
Is it wrong to rewrite an entire answer long after it has been accepted (and up voted)?
I feel that the new answer is much better and the people who voted for the original answer would surely have voted for this answer as well. But it's not the "same" answer that they actually voted for.
In case you want to look at the answer in question: this is the rewrite, and this is the original.