I've been around for awhile, and have a lot of love and respect for SO and what it stands for. It is still quite rewarding to log in some afternoons and see the green +10 telling me that I helped someone somewhere.
I recently got involved moderating low quality posts, and doing so got me thinking about my best-voted answer. Using Linq to get the last N elements of a collection?
Now, by current standards, this is a low-quality post. I mean, it isn't, because it helped lots of people. But it is because it lacks description, explanation, and rich content to make it more search-friendly. I'm glad it was helpful, but it deserves to be better quality.
I want audit my own profile for similarly sparse posts, not to change the intent or correctness of the post, but to bring them up to the current standards of SO. What is my concern, though, is that the answer helped people as it is and it was accepted by the OP as it is. And the question has been as it is for four and a half years.
So, to my question: Is it considered a good, bad, or an indifferent practice to revisit one's own old posts, particularly one's own accepted answers, and edit the content. Is the benefit of improving the content considered to outweigh the importance of the history and context in which the answer or question was framed? The SO help center states "Remember, you can always go back at any time and edit your answer to improve it"; however, is it appropriate to do so for very old content?
In some ways, this question is similar to How should one maintain/support old answers?; but different in the sense that I am not especially interested in preserving reputation or correcting obsolete answers. What I want to do is improve the quality, not necessarily the "correctness" of the posts. In this way, I would think that editing the posts is at worst harmless and at best useful, unless it is the opinion here that old posts carry historical significance as they stand.