Scenario
I recently answered a question in which the following took place:
- Person (x) answered more quickly but incorrectly.
- That answer was accepted.
- Moments later person (y) answered correctly.
- Person (x) changed his answer by deleting 1477 characters (first 997 then 480.)
This has some problems in the StackOverflow token economy:
- I was person (y) and felt cheated out of points that I had earned.
- This encourages hasty, somewhat helpful, but ultimately incorrect answers.
This seems like a way to game the system. We post a rushed but incorrect answer, somehow it gets marked as correct, and then we do a wholesale edit (perhaps based on other, more accurate answers.)
Feature Request
Once an answer is accepted, only 10% of the content can change, after which the system prevents further edits.
The would help because,
- the person who asked the question might realize that the answer is incorrect and thereby award the "accept" to the actual, correct answer.
- even if that doesn't happen, the community might realize that the accepted answer is incorrect and down vote it while up voting the actual, correct answer.
Re Duplicate
The answer in the duplicate says:
Absolutely nothing indicates that they [did x] rather than adding information they knew themselves already.
In the scenario about which I'm talking, person (x) deleted 1477 characters. This does not indicate adding information they knew themselves already.
10%
Noooooo. I sometimes post one version to succinctly answer the OP's question, Later (days, weeks not minutes), if it is the right kind of question/topic, I might expand the answer making it a bit broader with whys, wherefores, how-tos and references to make it more helpful to a broader audience.