I recently flagged an answer as Not an Answer, and thought that it was a pretty clear-cut case: the question is asking for a technical explanation of why you would use one C function rather than another. This "answer" contains a code block with no explanation, and the code in question makes no attempt to address why one or the other function is preferable - rather, it's a humorous snippet that redefines one function as the other (entire content of answer posted below for reference):
/* Have it anyway you like :-) */
#ifndef bzero
#define bzero(d,n) memset(d,0,n)
#endif
The six upvotes and the comment it's accrued suggest that people have found it funny, and although it seems clear this doesn't address the merits of the functions in question, my flag was declined with the following message:
declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer
I'm not claiming the answer is "technically inaccurate", I'm sure that it does what it appears to - it just seems to me that it makes no attempt to answer the question asked. It's got value as a loosely relevant comment, but does not meet the standard to be even a poor answer. Am I wrong?