The question I'm talking about is here
My answer is short enough to quote:
You need to
stty onlcr
in your script.I will leave the forensics of exactly where this is being unset in the tcsh environment as a exercise for the questioner ;)
Obviously this answer fails on a number of counts:
- It fails to say why the solution fixes the problem
- It fails to give even basic advice on how to investigate the root cause of the problem.
- Its tone is perhaps a little flippant and informal
In my defense - debugging the problem required a sitdown in chat with the questioner but the time difference meant that Wednesday evening after work for him was early AM Thursday morning for me, so once it was solved I was anxious to get to bed before I had to get up again.
My Concern:
There are three parties involved here. The SO community who have already up-voted the answer, the questioner who accepted it and paid from his own reputation, and me - I consider the answer sub-standard and would like to improve it.
So my question to meta is: Do we all have equal rights here? Is it ok to edit the answer with the intention of improving it and then wait for the community and the questioner to weigh in with their opinions of the edit. What is the accepted etiquette?
I edited my answer. Feel free to weigh in with your thoughts.