I'm sure this is all your favorite kind of question but I'm just looking for some feedback. Usually my NAA flags are successful and it's my most common type of flag.
I flagged this answer to a pretty bad question that seems 100% to me like it should have been a clarifying comment, but the user doesn't have enough rep to do so. That's usually why I flag, so I did, NAA without comment. I see now that it even has an auto-comment from a review queue (I'm guessing) expressing the same sentiment.
I got back:
declined - flags should not be used to indicate technical inaccuracies, or an altogether wrong answer
I don't understand this at all. I don't find there to be anything technically inaccurate or wrong here. I also don't see any code or anything that provides an answer to the question, such as it is.
Edit:
The text of the "Not an Answer" flag is as follows, with my emphasis:
This was posted as an answer, but it does not attempt to answer the question. It should possibly be an edit, a comment, another question, or deleted altogether.
These are the exact specifications from the OP's question:
- read the text file line by line from Top to Bottom
- takes the last Char from each line, even if there is only 1 Char at that line, and places him in the Next line, just before the last Char. (because when it jumps to the Next line, and moves this lines last char, the last Char from the previous line will be this lines new last char)
- and finally write that all to a new text file
The "answer" simply warns to also check for blank lines when you do this. It does not provide code, and it does not in any way attempt to answer any of the specifications.
Edit 2:
In response to several comments below and some obvious confusion between what is the actual policy as applied in practice and what is written in the UI and help files, I ask this:
Can anyone provide a clear and consistent definintion of 'answer', which explains what is and is not an answer, without something ethereal that echoes Potter Stewart's Definition of 'Pornography'?