I recently had an answer downvoted and deleted for not directly answering the question. Whilst I can see the argument that it does not constitute a good answer, I still feel that it was constructive and helpful to finding an actual solution to the issue, and the information I posted would not have fit well in a comment.
What's the balance here between providing helpful information and strictly complying to the SO guidelines? How should I have correctly conveyed this information to other users?
Posting the code sample on an external site and linking in the comments seems appropriate, but feels to me like a failure of SO to provide adequate tools for helping users.
Here's a screenshot of the answer as requested:
EDIT
Thank you to everyone for the detailed discussion, I appreciate the input. The outcome seems to be a mix of:
- The question did not provide enough information and the correct outcome should be just to vote to close, posting "cannot reproduce" as a comment; and
- This technique is borderline acceptable, but it should be clarified that the answer is "not a complete answer" and will be deleted/edited once more information is supplied.
I've accepted the highest rated answer as I'm guessing that it reflects the general consensus (I'm still new to meta)
__import__
statement, implying that perhaps the issue is within user code. Maybe I should have explicitly stated that fact.