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After I read the introduction about StackOverflow documentation, I instantly thought of one piece of documentation I wanted to see there. This great answer, about how to undo a Git commit, that I referred to a lot during my first months of learning to use Git.

So how should I proceed? Should I link this answer into the documentation or should I copy the content? I see benefits and problems with both approaches but I think it's mostly a policy to be decided.

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    I'd say my concern is exactly the same, but about official documentation of things maintained typically by their authors. Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 11:26
  • But if you mean on their own websites @BartekBanachewicz there is still a point to copy it to avoid broken links. But of course still has the downside to duplicate the information, updates won't follow. Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 11:41
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    Exactly, it's the case of "bad" fragmentation that was mentioned in one of the earlier posts about the docs. Everything that is supposed to even remotely look like an official documentation will a) lag behind b) risk being outdated. Commented Jul 21, 2016 at 11:42
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    +1, I'm eager to hear the community's opinion on this. Would it be appropriate to leave a comment for the author recommending that they contribute their content to the documentation? Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 14:07
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    Same question also asked here meta.stackoverflow.com/q/328444/2003763 but not answered because of multiple questions in the same thread. Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 14:48
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    +1 There should be a guideline for this. There's a lot of great answers that would benefit from being a documentation rather than an answer so others can contribute. Maybe link to the author, or the original question. Or maybe a button on answers letting the author know that this answers should be copied to documentation.
    – Jørgen
    Commented Jul 23, 2016 at 8:29

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