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I'm interested in what guidance/advice can folks offer on when to edit questions to add more information vs asking a brand new follow-on question (that references the first one as a hyperlink)

I asked this question which got quite a high rating and some really interesting comments. Having read some of the links that people provided in answers and comments, I'd like to ask a couple more questions - Basically, now I know a bit more than I did when I originally asked the question, I'd like to ask a slightly updated question.

my instinct is to ask another one, reference the first qn - but I'm interested to know if that's 'not the done thing' - main rationale is that I think edits are mainly for when it's clear people misunderstood what you originally meant or your question was too brief or poorly formed, which I don't think is the case here.

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  • "I think edits are mainly for when it's clear people misunderstood what you originally meant or your question was too brief or poorly formed" - exactly, you shouldn't be editing a question once it's started getting answers.
    – jonrsharpe
    Apr 19, 2015 at 14:00

1 Answer 1

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If you have a follow-on question always ask a new question.

Editing your old question is not the way to go:

  1. It potentially invalidates any existing answers.
  2. People might not answer as they won't realise that you've tacked on a new bit to the question.
  3. Chameleon questions annoy people and they might down-vote it.

You should include a link to your original question so that people know the context of what you're trying to do.

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