Several times in my life of using SO as a resource to get my problem solved I come across what I consider a half-effort in an answer. It leads me to the right result in the end, but there were a good stack of additional problems to overcome with it, that really should have been part of the original solution
One example was in the following form:
Q: How can I load a file in (a particular context) if I'm using cache system Y
A (from someone else): Do this:
y.load(file)
That's fine if you only do it once per file, but say there's a high chance that the same file will attempt to be loaded twice and cache Y throws a particularly nasty error if you load twice. I thus regarded the answer as a half-hearted effort and I added some detail:
A: Do this:
y.load(file)
Note: you can only load a file once so if you envisage a situation where the same file may be scheduled for load multiple times, a code pattern like this would be more appropriate:if(not y.contains(file)) y.load(file)
I want to make it clear that in the original story that gave rise to this question my edit wasn't just a 1 liner tidbit of advice that would fit in a comment - the above contrived scenario I describe is a short short version of an edit i suggested that ran to tens of lines of explanation, code samples, example data etc
The edit was rejected by peer review and my edits generally attract rejection reasons of "This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer."
My perspective is that ALL my edits are with the intention of adopting the tone of the answering person, and writing TO the original questioner and they're done as edits because there's no way they would fit meaningfully in a comment because of formatting/length/volume of info but they can't stand on their own as an answer without plagiarising the other poster because they are (IMHO valid) improvements to the solution the other person proposed rather than being a nbetter answer in their own right. I simultaneously don't want to take away from their original inspiration in answering the question nor pollute the site with duplicate info from their post
So what do you do when you want to flesh out a half-hearted answer? Or improve an answer that outlines e.g. 6 steps but you know that 3 of them are erroneous/a bad way to do things?