The following is a link-only answer (even to outside Stack Exchange universe):
There's a tutorial and a nicely wrapped class available here.
Yet my "Not an answer"- flag was declined. Why?
The following is a link-only answer (even to outside Stack Exchange universe):
There's a tutorial and a nicely wrapped class available here.
Yet my "Not an answer"- flag was declined. Why?
As you can probably guess from the comments and numerous links in the sidebar, it's been hotly debated whether or not "link-only" answers really qualify as "not an answer." Under the latest guidance we have from the Community Manager team, the post you linked to was not an answer because it consisted of a link and no other scrap of information that actually answered the question.
The fact that the link is working and the "answer" was accepted does complicate the decision to delete the post though. There are a lot of better ways to handle this, and not all of them require a moderator.
Of these, "leave it alone" is not really acceptable. It leaves too many broken windows on the site and teaches new users bad habits. Since people will flag a post over and over before they think to improve it, that leaves "convert to comment" (which does require a moderator) as the last option, so I've done that in this case.
Moderation is a bit shizo in regards to link-only answers:
If it's old and upvoted, especially if it is also accepted, the diamond moderators don't want to do anything until the link breaks.
Best reserve the flags for newer content, which will be somewhat reliably removed under the same circumstances, encouraging actual answers.
VLQ and NAA flags on accepted answers will always be handled by diamond moderators, because the community cannot delete them, which those flags ask for.