So, I have this question from 2010 about some persnickety MS Excel constraints I couldn't (then or now, if I were still trying) get around. I'm pretty sure that I made a clear case in the original post, and clarified a couple questions about it in comments, consistent with a pattern I've seen many, many times (and followed) here. Then, I got a bunch of answers that didn't read the question all the way through, and told them so. (I am, admittedly, not the world's most patient respondent when it comes to reading comprehension on a site that [it seems to me] depends on it.)
A few days ago, I get a new answer, and since I have (I hope understandably) moved on from the problem in the "interim", I point out an immediate error or two previously indicated on the thread, get told that the specifics aren't the answerer's problem, so go back and check for about 2 minutes, and realize the answer is totally incorrect, so downvote. Now, said poster is flagging the question, hiding my responding comments, etc.--basically lording reputation over me. (I am a poster who admittedly asks more questions than I answer, and often long-winded ones that go unanswered, their quality notwithstanding in this context, so I don't carry much weight in this.)
Sorry for the blow-by-blow drama, but, in a search for canonical resources, how does one stop this from getting out of control, without rewarding the absolute incorrectness of the post that brought this other contributor and I together after so many years?