I was going to post another comment, but I think it's time to just bite the bullet and post an answer. Judging by appearances, it won't be a popular one, but it is nevertheless the correct one.
First things first—the problem here is the question. It is a straight-up recommendation question. And one of the problems with these types of questions is precisely that they invite this type of link-only answer. So if we want to address the root of the problem, we address the question(s) that are attracting such answers.
And I think we are addressing that problem. It is not only part of an official policy that open-ended recommendation questions are off-topic here. That it is a commonly-known community norm is also evidenced by the fact that that particular question has been closed by 5 members of the community for precisely that reason. As I pointed out in a comment above, that closure happened about 10 minutes prior to this question being posted on Meta, so it cannot have been the "Meta effect" that was responsible for its closure.
Now that the question has been closed, it can't attract any more of these answers, so the problem has been addressed at its source.
As far as the answer itself, I'll agree it isn't the best answer I've ever seen. But it is an answer. It does answer the question. The question asks for a lightweight alternative to jQuery UI sliders, and Ryan's answer, by all objective standards, recommends a lightweight alternative to jQuery UI sliders. It meets all of the standards enumerated in the question, namely that it is lightweight because it does not use jQuery and that it allows the creation of a bar with a draggable knob.
I know what you're thinking—but…but…it's still a bad answer. Well, yes. Because it's an answer to a bad question. But it is an answer.
And don't take my word for it. Shog spent hours working on this thingy about apples that tries to explain what the criteria for answers are. I'll be the first to admit I don't really understand all of it, but it seems pretty clear to me that there exists such a thing as link-only answers that are answers. Look at his two examples, one a link to the documentation for a FileOutputStream
and the second a link to the manual for preg_split
. Both are very short and contain pretty much just a link, but they do nevertheless convey information that is subject to answering the question.
In this case, the answer did, as we've already established, answer the question. Moreover, the community of jquery and slider experts has already established via voting that this is a useful answer. You are complaining that it is not, but you are going about it precisely backwards. Standards have been established to help us judge, independent of context, what a good answer is. They aren't needed in this case, because we already have context that establishes whether or not it is a useful answer.
Beyond all of that, it seems like the underlying concern here is one of reputation.
You still have a user with a +10 score for whats essentially tosh.
So what? They got magic Internet points? Great, with the 10 points they earned from that answer and $5, they can buy a cup of coffee.