I asked a question about unit testing in iOS. And @RichTolley gave me a good answer. It can be seen that it took time to make up an answer like that. It contains a good instruction, an explanation, and some useful links as well.
However then I noticed, that I made a mistake, which radically changes the question (originally I was asking about using a separate test target, but then realized, that I wanted to ask about a separate test host, while a separate test target is not an issue for me). So I updated the question.
But then I thought: what about the answer I was given? It took time and effort to compose it, and it really did answer the original question. It doesn't seem right to me that my edit of the question simply invalidated at least half of it.
So I thought: wouldn't it be better to revert the question to its original state (or even make it fit the answer a little better, since I was confused, while writing the original question) and ask another question about the separate test host? But I don't know whether it is a right thing to do from the point of view of the SO community, so I'm here for an advice: what should I do?
- Leave the edited question as it is, leaving it up to the author of the answer to update it accordingly (doesn't seem very right to me).
- Revert the question and ask another one.
- Delete the question (wow!).