Disclamer: I know this was already discussed at least in two Q&As: Answering a question with a different approach altogether / Submit an Answer which does not offer a solution to the exact scenario but solves the problem nevertheless?
Note: I've completely rephrased this question, because I think community got too focused on a concrete case that saddened me yesterday, but my intention was just looking for validation in the topic of this meta question itself...
Since I started to contribute on Stack Overflow, I've been actively answering issues where not always I've provided the expected answer by the OP. As I've already said, not always, but sometimes I tend to provide what I would call disruptive answers addressing issues using alternate approaches that based on my knowledge, I would find a better one.
From my standpoint, I feel happy with that way of answering to questions, because I would say that quality answers aren't the ones that may give an instant solution to the OP. Usually I feel that a good answer should be a one that addresses both the surface and background of the problem. In summary, I love solving the root of the issue.
I identify those answers as disruptive ones because you need to convince the OP that it's the way to go and once the OP realizes that's his/her solution, it might happen that they need a big refactor on their project code base. Isn't this positively annoying for the OP?
I've wanted to ask this question many times, basically because I've had to deal with other contributors pointing me that I'm not answering the question, and I've never arrived to any definitive conclusion whenever that recurrent discussion takes place. Hence I'm looking for the community advise.
Are disruptive answers a bad habit? Or should I go on with them when I find that they can be useful for the OP and the community altogether?