You should first search to see if your bug has been reported. If it has, it's fine to create an answer with a description of the bug and a link to the issue, as Nathan recommended.
- You don't necessarily have to accept your own answer, if the other answer was more helpful to work around any bug.
If you don't find an existing report, you could file your own bug report.
If the report is closed, check the reason. It will likely confirm that it's not an actual bug. Many suspected bugs turn out to be programmer errors.
If the report is left open and (un)assigned, it's an actual bug. Provide an answer as previously explained.
Since you don't have much time to research the issue:
Make sure you're searching the right resource, such as an issue tracker.
Make sure you're using the the right terms or keywords. Use specific error messages when possible, such as FileNotFoundException
. There's currently only 58 open issues, so it wouldn't take much time to see if there's an existing report.
It really doesn't take that much time to search the right sites, such as an issues tracker or developer forum. The key is generally knowing where to search, and what to specifically search for, to turn up reports in the first place.
As an aside, my very first SO question turned out to be an iOS bug, and I ended up self-answering it with links to bug reports.