Three years ago I have given the a link-only answer which promoted my library in the following question without authorship disclosure. This answer was later deleted as spam/link-only which it deserved to be. For those who's interested but don't see the answer, it was basically a "try my tool (link), here's an example (link)" answer.
I have no excuse; I just did not know the rules back then.
I came across the same question today, recalled it, was ashamed and decided to give it another try.
Here's my new answer:
It still promotes my tool as I still think it is suitable for the task. But now it features:
- Full authorship disclosure.
- Criteria when to use the tool and hints when it may not be suitable.
- Code examples directly in the answer.
- Link to a ready-to-run sample in JSFiddle.
Is it good now? Or would it still be considered spam?
The thing is, I develop and maintain a number of open-source tools in the area of XML processing and JavaScript. I answer questions on SO in the same area. Time after time I see questions which describe use cases (or potential use cases) for my tools. So in this cases I consider it to be appropriate to promote my tools.
At the same time I feel that the line between a fair answer and spam may be quite fine.
What do you think, is this a good answer?
offline resoucre
I'd even would not tend to flag a bad written answer as spam. And if not too many answers are just pointing to your "product" as it stands now I would not see it as perfectly fine. I just would expect the question being close as OT.as it stands now I would see it as perfectly fine.
Typo :(. I fully agree with the accepted answer.