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I spent a lot of time trying to answer a question which was put on hold. You may be asking why I tried to answer this question, so I'll say:

  1. When I started, the question wasn't on hold.
  2. This comment stated that: "You haven't asked anything resembling a question. You haven't even said if your code is working or not." I see what @meagar means, but after fiddling with it, I could see multiple problems with the supplied code, which I addressed.

So, I think it is fine to disabling answering on a question that is [on hold], but I think that it is unfair to disable the Post Your Answer button once a user has spent time trying to answer the question.

Is my problem unreasonable?

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2 Answers 2

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I am now waiting for the post to be fixed

Wait, what? You just said…

I see what @meagar means, but after fiddling with it, I could see multiple problems with the supplied code, which I addressed.

That says to me that you actually took the time to do the work the asker was supposed to have done in advance. Now, I don't know why you wasted the time to do that, but since you did, you are in a perfect position to edit the question and fix its problems. In other words, you can turn it into a real question. You don't have to "wait" for the post to get fixed.

And, of course, once it's fixed, the process of getting it re-opened proceeds much more quickly.

So, I think it is fine to disabling answering on a question that is [on hold], but I think that it is unfair to disable the Post Your Answer button once a user has spent time trying to answer the question.

I disagree that we need a special case here. How should the system know how much time you've spent trying to answer the question? Lots of people compose answers in the IDE of their choice, rather than in the textbox on the page. How should that time be taken into account?

More to the point, by closing unclear questions, we are trying to save other people the time that you have invested in this one. You have already admitted that the question was unclear to you at first, and how you can see what the people who voted to close it were thinking.

If you really saw a gem in the question that early, you should have edited it first, before spending time on an answer. If you didn't see any redeeming value in the question before spending a lot of time answering it, then I guess I would just ask that, in the future, you spend your time more wisely, investing more heavily in answering high-quality questions, rather than low-quality ones.

Of course, you are welcome to answer any questions you want. But, as has been pointed out already, you took a gamble in trying to answer a low-quality question.

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  • I agree with you with most of those things :), although, I am still not convinced that the "Post Your Answer" button should be disabled. Side note: I actually have tried to edit it. "I am now waiting for the post to be fixed" was a mistake. Remember, that I'm not a veteran.
    – Luke
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 7:54
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As I know, there is a special case already. As soon as you didn't close or reload the tab, you can post the answer even if the question is put on hold.


Question about this possibility on metaRuSO (in Russian).

Timeline fragment for the question mentioned there:

2015-12-10 08:09:51Z   answered
2015-12-10 07:25:32Z   closed
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    I think this is wrong. The "Post Your Answer" button was grayed out after the post was put on hold.
    – Luke
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 8:04
  • @Mirabilis, if I find that topic, I'll add a link to it and question history.
    – Qwertiy
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 8:06
  • Okay, but maybe they have changed it? Thanks anyway :).
    – Luke
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 8:07
  • @Mirabilis, you can use your browser developer console to re-enable the button, and it'll let you post just fine. Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 11:09
  • @Mirabilis, added the links.
    – Qwertiy
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 11:36
  • Could anybody explain why minuses?
    – Qwertiy
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 13:12
  • 1. I am 99% sure that there is no special case 2. The question nor the timeline make any sense.
    – Luke
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 20:32
  • @Mirabilis, 1. The question tells that answering closed question is possible if you didn't reload the page. 2. The timeline shows that answer was added 44 minutes after the question was closed. Because of that thee was a question asked on meta - how is it possible to answer after putting the question on hold.
    – Qwertiy
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 20:56

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