I failed the following audit, but want to ensure that I truly understand why this answer deserved to be marked as a "bad" answer.
I understand that it's not a stellar response, but is it really so poor that it belongs as an audit? To make it clear, I am not complaining about failing the audit - I simply want to learn exactly what makes this answer bad enough to flag so I don't fail future audits.
For reference, here is the question corresponding to the answer:
GCM: How to use same sender id for both android and ios app?
I know that it is possible (Android GCM: same sender id for more application) but I don't know how to make it happen.
GCM is already working properly on our android app. Now we want to use it in our ios app too. But when I try to register ios app for gcm in google developer console, it always registers a new app and provides a new sender id.
NOTE: No plan to use Firebase Cloud Messaging(FCM) yet.
And here is the answer in question:
For Android and iOS you can use same senderID just go to Google Developer console and check for the same app ios and android.
The comment from the close voters was:
This does not provide an answer to the question. Once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post; instead, provide answers that don't require clarification from the asker.
Which is false in my opinion. The answer did answer the question.
As I said, the answer isn't perfect, but it does appear to answer the question.
In fact, the question was asked previously and the accepted answer was:
You can and should use the same sender_id and server key for Android and iOS given that they are the same application. Clients can receive/send messages from/to multiple servers (Developer console projects) but this is not necessary.
Your server makes an XMPP connection with GCM and send and receive messages via GCM. A single XMPP server can send to both Android and iOS clients.
Which appears to be the same answer, albeit with slightly better wording. Is this simply a case of my standards being too low? I see "no action" as not deserving of an upvote, nor a downvote. To me, at least, this answer fit that category. It's not great, but it does answer the question.