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I have a newly created question, I'm still searching for answers, then I came across this answer which doesn't answer my question but it solve the issue I'm trying to acheive. Anyways that answer was not yet accepted by OP [last login at 2014].

My question is about replacing a font file, not replacing an object on runtime which that answer gave. It gave a different approach but solved my problem.

Now I want to reference that answer for future people who will run into same problem as mine, because though it's a different question, it gives solution by a different approach.

How should I reference that answer in my question?

I see some options:

  • I will answer my question with link to that answer. (I see questions that did that.)
  • I will just comment the link and tell that my question was not solved but it solved my problem.
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    I would self answer my own question and give reference to the other answer by explaning and linking to it and of course upvote the other answer.
    – surfmuggle
    Commented Mar 28, 2016 at 11:26

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If that answer helped you but it did not entirely solve your issue, you can self-answer your own question with the code that actually worked. Self-answering is explicitly allowed.

You can always add a line "based on ..." somewhere.

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  • What if the other answer does entirely solve my issue, even though the question was different?
    – Super Jade
    Commented Jan 3, 2019 at 22:59

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