Apologies if Meta is not the place for this. Let me know if not, and I will delete. (If it's an OK Meta question, I'd take suggestions on a better title!)
I asked a rather badly-worded-novel-of an excel/vba question (after a long search). Heading was fine, text was questionable:
Combine two overlapping tables of date ranges
I received an answer that DOES work with the data given, but is too slow for my purposes (because that data was just a tiny bit of a larger project) and is tightly tied to example data. I finally figured it out on my own.
I would self-answer, but my code is 200 lines and wouldn't make sense without the spreadsheet. (Plus, my VBA coding is definitely not "best practice" stuff - it's a side-language.)
But I can explain what I did.
I've searched for an answer to this particular problem several times over the last few years, so I am pretty sure that the question itself is a good question.
I HATE coming to SO and finding a question very close to my issue, but without an answer, or with a very specific coding answer that can't easily be revamped for what I'm doing.
Should I:
Delete the question and know that I now know what I need to know? I'd hate for someone to find this and think, "Wow, that was exactly my question, but unfortunately, the answer is too slow/very specific to the data"
Mark the answer as correct, even though I didn't use it (it DOES work, and is simpler than my solution, though slower and data specific) and leave it?
Explain what I did briefly, without code and mark one of the two (mine or the original answer-er) as correct?
Delete the question and create a self-answer question with a limited data set, not the novel I wrote for this question, and again, explain how I solved it without having to post 200 lines of code and a spreadsheet?
I think it's a valuable question, given how many times I have searched for it. I think an explanation of the logic would have enabled me to figure things out a lot sooner.
What is considered the best/the most useful thing to do?