I have been trying to follow the advice over here when I run into out of date answers - specifically:
...edit the answer to indicate that the answer is outdated....leave a note, at the top, preferably in italics saying something like: "[Editor's note: this answer was applicable until version 1.x, but version 2.x was released on 1st Jan 2014]".
I believe in these cases, an edit is more appropriate than a comment because comments are intentionally temporary. Normally I just edit a note onto the accepted answer, and post an up to date answer with information about which version it applies to.
With the breaking changes to Apache 2.4 regarding access control, I've run into a few of these.
I recently ran into a question where the accepted answer was awful and the right answer was split into different approaches by two answers.
I used two different wordings...because I hate redundancy I was cleverly A-B testing. Wording 1:
Update for Apache 2.4: This answer is correct for Apache 2.2. In Apache 2.4 the access control paradigm has changed, and the correct syntax is to use Require all denied.
This edit was accepted twice, including by the author, and rejected once, because
This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer.
Wording 2:
This solution is correct for Apache 2.2, but in Apache 2.4 access control has changed. Use Require all denied for Apache 2.4.
This edit was rejected by all three reviewers, for the reason above.
I don't see a significant difference in the wording, so I think it's really hit-or-miss depending on the reviewer.
What's the best approach to this type of edit to make it clear to reviewers that it is NOT intended to address the author?