Every now and again, I'll come across a question that was not clearly explained, so much so that users attempting to answer the question end up completely misunderstanding the problem, and end up giving answers that seem correct, but in fact do not solve the original poster's actual problem.
Examples:
How do you push a Git tag to a branch using a refspec?
This question used to have the extremely vague title of
git push tag -> master
The problem is actually about force-pushing a specific tag to overwrite a branch, which was correctly answered, despite the vague title. Yet precisely because of the vague title, other users misunderstood the fundamental problem, and just gave answers for pushing tags to a remote repo in general.
How do I properly force a Git push?
This question is extremely deceptive, because as I pointed out in my answer to it, the original poster's actual problem seems to stem entirely from the fact that he's trying to push to a non-bare Git repo, which isn't something that was clearly explained in past revisions. So, basically, the title doesn't match the actual fundamental problem.
Is it OK to make clarifying edits to these questions that end up invalidating the existing answers that do not address the actual problem?
I've already made extensive clarifying edits to How do you push a Git tag to a branch using a refspec? a few months ago, going so far as to completely rewrite the existing title. However, in doing so, I've basically invalidated some of the existing answers (though, again, those answers do not address the OP's actual problem).
Is that OK? If not, what can be done instead?
With How do I properly force a Git push?, I'd like to edit the title to be
Why does my non-bare remote repo have uncommitted changes after pushing to it?
to emphasize the fundamental nature of the problem, but if I did that, again, I would end up invalidating some of the existing answers that still claim that the original poster's problem was somehow the way that he was trying to force push.
Is that OK? If not, what can be done instead?
I was thinking that perhaps if someone was going to make such a clarifying edit that invalidates existing answers (that misunderstand the actual problem), then that editor could also add an editor's note to those answers that explains that they're solutions to a different problem:
Editor's note: this answer addresses
<insert problem here>
, which is similar but different to the problem posed in the OP's question.
or are based on earlier revisions of the question:
Editor's note: this answer is based on an earlier revision
<link to revision>
of the OP's question.
What do people think? I would prefer to edit questions so that they're clearer, but what do I do in more complicated cases like these?
Updated thoughts
After giving it some thought, I just wanted to point out that one could make the argument that if the existing answers completely misinterpret the fundamental nature of the problem in the question, then they're already invalid, and making a clarifying edit will only highlight their pre-existing invalidity.
Here's another thought: if I would make clarifying edits to a question to improve it when the question doesn't have any answers (and I indeed would), then why should it matter if the question does have answers? If people answer a question that isn't clear enough to be correctly answered, and through clarifying edits it turns out that those users completely misunderstood the fundamental problem, then are they not themselves at least partially to blame for the invalidation of their own answers?
Or am I not thinking about this in the right way?
Along those lines, the answers to Is it OK to answer vague, unclear questions? may also be relevant.