To be fair, this was not a link-only answer (credit to its author):
Please follow the link below.
http://answers.unity3d.com/questions/224693/add-force-increase-speed-of-ball-periodically.html
It explains about Adding Force to Increase the Speed of Ball. This
might help you with your torpedo speed.
While most of the information might indeed be in the document linked, the answer itself suggests "Adding Force to Increase the Speed of Ball". It may be very succinct indeed, but it may also be sufficient for the readers to solve their problems, or at least to point them in the right direction, even if the link was down.
For that reason, it shouldn't have been deleted as a link-only answer. Of course, that certainly doesn't mean it was a good answer that deserved upvotes.
In fact, had this answered be phrased slightly differently, as follows, it probably wouldn't have been flagged:
You could try adding force to increase the speed of your torpedo, as described in this example.
(Flagging it as a link-only answer effectively penalises an answerer who was willing to help for not knowing his Markdown syntax very well, for one of his first answers on the site.)
Coming back to the controversial topic of link-only answers, they're generally bad indeed, but not all links are equal. Taking too hard a stance on answers that look like link-only answers (but often actually have a tiny bit more information) doesn't help anyone. And yes, we're here to help. Many people (especially on Meta) seem to think that the only goal of Stack Overflow is to build a knowledge repository, not a to be a help site, but at the end of the day, the aim of that knowledge repository is to help its readers. Curating in an unnecessarily harsh way can actually hinder that objective.
The question in question now has a better answer, so this point is a bit irrelevant, but when the now-deleted "link-only" answer was the only answer, this was a decent pointer (it was even briefly selected as the accepted answer).
If no new answer had been written, it could very well have stayed for a long period of time, helping any reader having the same question.
Maybe the "link decay" issue would have become a problem at some point in time, but that's just the way the web works. For corner cases like this (again, not strictly a link-only answer), a bit of judgement could be used, instead of deleting such a "suspicious" answer on the spot.
In particular, the domain name of that link is the official domain associated with the framework in the question. Sure, there's never any absolute certainty, and document writers may indeed move their links around from time to time, but it is reasonable to assume that this link is going to be reasonably maintained, at least that its fate is going to be closely linked to that of the framework in question. (If unity3d.com
completely disappeared, questions about Unity 3D would also probably be completely irrelevant.)
I'm not suggesting that we should keep link-only answers in any case, let alone that we should consider them to be good answers. I'm suggesting that we use a bit more judgement before flagging and deleting such answers, by considering these answers in their context, and assessing the balance between providing useful information to the reader against the risk the link might no longer work on day in the future. (If we assume that the world around Stack Overflow is going to disappear, we're in serious trouble anyway.)
A typical example of terrible link-only answer that should indeed be deleted would be:
Try this: http://myblog.dyndns.example/...
However, there is a major difference with this and what we had in the deleted answer:
- The answer mentioned "adding force" (and if we look at the now-accepted answer, it relies on an
AddForce
method, so that would have been a useful clue to look for, even in an offline copy of the framework's documentation).
- The link was reasonably likely to be stable. Sure there's always a risk, but in doubt, for edge cases like this, trying to not to prevent users helping each other is often a better choice.