The post should have been deleted. I'm not a mod, so until a mod acts on it the best option would probably be to invoke the meta effect and go and down vote it so that 20k users can cast delete votes on it themselves.
When I say "the post should have been deleted" there are two sources I draw upon for this. The first in the help center Why and how are some answers deleted?
Answers that do not fundamentally answer the question may be removed. This includes answers that are:
- commentary on the question or other answers
- asking another, different question
- “thanks!” or “me too!” responses
- exact duplicates of other answers
- barely more than a link to an external site
- not even a partial answer to the actual question
The wording of 'exact duplicates' is looked at in the light of the close as duplicate question: Changes to "close as duplicate" (part deux)
This does not mean plagiarism or copying but rather that the exact same message is being conveyed with different words.
If someone was to post an answer to the question that read:
You should set the target framework of all the projects that are being used to the same version.
This would also be an exact duplicate, even though it uses different words.
The second source for this is based on How aggressively should we maintain and improve very popular questions? in which Jeff Atwood says:
If answers are to be outright deleted and not combined, they should be provably bad by concrete metrics.
We know that quality equates strongly with length (TWSS). Therefore, answers that are strong candidates for deletion:
belong to low rep or anon users with no real commitment to the community
are provably duplicate, that is, were added well after (30+ mins later) other answers that contained the same exact information
are short in length
do not explain much of anything
The answer meets all of these criteria:
The poster is a low rep, unregistered user who was last seen on May 2, 2012 and has answered one, and only one question.
They are provably duplicate - the two answers are both saying "set your target framework to the same version". The newer answer was posted several months after the other answer (well outside of a 30+ minute window)
The answer is short in length: 181 characters (that includes a smiley)
It explains nothing. I'm not going to say the other answer explained anything either, but this isn't about the other answer - its about this one.
Furthermore, the user fails to meet the requirements for 'deserving' the reputation:
Stack Overflow citizens in good standing deserve credit for their contributions.
If an answer is correct, but weak, I'd be willing to extend the benefit of the doubt and leave a comment asking for clarification if the user
Whereas if it is a weak answer by a user with 1 rep, or a user with 50 rep who hasn't been seen in a year, I'd be much more inclined to delete it outright.
There is additional guidance to this by another Stack Exchange employee in another answer to the site: How aggressively should we maintain and improve very popular questions?
- What should we do when new answers trickle in and are dupes?
Down-vote them, perhaps leave a comment noting that this answer already exists and that they should try to add something new if they really must bother. Protect the question if useful. Delete once noise-level injures the ability of future readers to evaluate new and novel answers.
I would contend that a question with 19 answers (and probably a few deleted ones too) that has duplicate answers is at the threshold for noise-level causing injuries for the ability of future readers to evaluate new and novel answers. And yes, it should be down voted (three so far) and no, leaving a comment for an unregistered user who hasn't been seen in over two years will not inspire them to update the answer.
Therefore, using all the guidance and criteria available it is clear that the newer answer should be deleted. The question is who is going to do it - a mod? or finding 18 more people (at this time) to down vote the answer so that it may be deleted by the community?
Pruning poor and duplicate answers is a key part to the value proposition of Stack Exchange. Stack exchange is not a forum. It is not Yahoo Answers. The fact that the answer is +20/-3 at this time is not an indication of any sort of popularity (especially when the other answer is at +274/0) on a question with 135k views. That isn't a "popular answer that 20 people found helpful". That is "an answer that people voted up because it said the same thing about 0.01% of the time the page was visited."
By keeping poor answers that duplicate other answers around, Stack Overflow looks more and more like a forum and it becomes harder to find the answer. This increase in the noise that obscures the signal is exactly what Stack Overflow was intended to address.
By keeping these answers the example of what an acceptable answer for other people to follow. It doesn't matter if you say the same thing as another answer in a post. If you use different words you get to have your answer stick around. There is a quality problem on Stack Overflow and while people may decry the "you're taking mods time with old historical things" until these posts are addressed people will see what type of quality is acceptable on the site and continue to post such answers.