We all know what a link-only answer is: it's an answer that, aside from a link, has no other meaningful content and therefore cannot stand on its own without the link. Such an answer requires readers to click on the link for it to have any use whatsoever. The classic and most egregious example:
Check this link, it will help you... https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/xf2k8ftb.aspx
(By the way, what are we supposed to check the link for exactly? Link rot? Spelling errors? Ticks?)
Now, consider the following:
To output to the console, you can use
Console.WriteLine()
. For an example of how to use this method, see the documentation.
This answer consists of two parts:
- A statement of which method to use to output to the console (which is notably missing from the egregious example above — even the URL doesn't convey any useful information aside from the fact that it's an MSDN documentation link).
- A link pointing to examples of how to use said method to output to the console.
Based on the first statement alone, this now looks like an answer to a question you would expect to find on Stack Overflow (let's pretend the question is "How can I output to the console in a .NET console application?"), which means flagging as NAA becomes inappropriate.
The reader doesn't have to click the link to find out which method to use to output to the console. The reader does have to click the link to see the examples since they don't appear in the answer — but only if the reader is interested in the examples.
Obviously, the ideal action to take on such an answer is to quote the examples from the link within the answer. But should this be required lest the entire answer be deleted via the LQP review process? I mean, the second statement could always be edited out altogether and the link problem would go away and the answer would still be an answer:
To output to the console, you can use
Console.WriteLine()
.
And having the link die on us would be no different from making such an edit.
But does this warrant deleting the entire thing outright?