I have asked this question (about .NET). After a while, a user has requested additional info by comment. I took a look at that, read some MSDN and decided that replacing my method call with the one being part of that comment is the ultimate solutionTM of the problem made me asking my question.
The title of my question was "Do I have to call Application.ExitThread()?" and the comment and my research have shown that this is not the case – I have to call Application.DoEvents()
instead. So I wrote an answer (the one I'm asking about right now) starting with "No, I haven't.". I chose 1st person singular because I was answering my own question and I clearly explained why exactly I don't have to call that method.
I don't understand at all why my answer was deleted and I even less understand how people can comment (the answer) like that:
- "Please use the edit link on your question to add additional information."
- This is no "additional information" – this is an answer: "Do I have ...?" – "No, I haven't."
- "The Post Answer button should be used only for complete answers to the question."
- That was a complete answer: "Do I have ...?" – "No, I haven't. <the reason why I haven't ...>"
- "This does not provide an answer to the question."
- see 2.
- "To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post."
- (Srsly?!) Someone thinks that either
- I'm criticing the author of the question (myself – I answered my own question) or
- I'm requesting clarification from the author (myself – again)
- (Srsly?!) Someone thinks that either
It's a pity that (at least some) people seem not to think at all before commenting and I hope that the deletion was really my fault and you didn't delete the answer because some moderator took the comments at face value.
Application.ExitThread()
."