7

I was just involved in a question where the OP was describing seemingly impossible behavior. The OP had not posted enough source code to identify the issue. Someone answered with what looks like a complete guess. There is not enough info in either the question or the answer to identify a problem or a solution, someone just fiddled with the code enough that it started working.

In this kind of question, is there anything to do to rescue the question now that the OP has moved on? There might be a very good question/answer in that problem. I definitely don't know what caused it (based on the solution, my guess in comments was wrong).

5
  • 7
    Close as "not enough information to diagnose problem".
    – bjb568
    Commented May 4, 2014 at 7:37
  • 14
    This is why it is important that poor questions get closed quickly. They are a magnet for bad answers if that doesn't happen. Only thing left now is to get enough delete votes after it gets closed, pretty unlikely to happen. One bad question requiring ten votes to get rid of, that's a massive scaling problem. Commented May 4, 2014 at 10:34
  • @HansPassant perhaps the rules for deletion votes should be changed. I can understand why it would take more votes to delete duplicate questions that have good, useful answers, but what good does it serve to keep around answers to non-duplicate, bad questions? Especially if they're closed as such :/
    – user456814
    Commented May 4, 2014 at 21:07
  • Possible duplicate of Handling Answers Containing "I can't reproduce that"
    – Laurel
    Commented Jun 6, 2016 at 21:47
  • It seems to me that a good answer to a bad question would include why the answer solved the problem, and would become the rescue that you're suggesting. A fiddled with answer that just happens to work (and nobody knows why) doesn't really strike me as a learning or documentation opportunity for the community. In this case, either the OP or the answerer could make that rescue and update the question to be definitive. Barring that, I'd certainly vote to close a poorly-constructed question that had a random-ish answer. Commented Jun 6, 2016 at 22:21

0

You must log in to answer this question.

Browse other questions tagged .