A few days ago, I made a topic about Posting jibberish then delete to reserve "first answer" that brought up some interesting opinions on the matter. Please have a look if you are unfamiliar with the topic before reading on.
The post was intended more for discussion and to see if people agree it's actually a problem. However, most comments described how the system currently works; only a few suggested how this potential problem can be fixed or prevented.
Therefore, this is not a duplicate of that other question. It is a feature request, as opposed to a discussion or support request.
My suggestion:
If an answer is un-deleted within the first 5-minute grace-period, the "answered" timestamp is updated.
What problems does this solve?
The benefit to this minor feature is two-fold:
It prevents users from posting answers with nonsense in the body and then quickly deleting it, which secures them the benefit of having their answer being at the top among other answers (if sorted by "oldest first"), thus increasing the visibility of their answer.
It prevents the abusive side of this functionality, such as plagiarizing someones answer and then claiming it as your own. Such cases cannot be tracked down nor somehow proven, not even by mods, since this isn't logged anywhere.
What I think is great about this solution is that it doesn't affect the revision history at all. As such, even in genuine situations, such as accidental deletions, your half-baked answer won't be logged.
Undeletions after the first 5-minute grace-pediod will obviously show up in the revision history anyway, so that's not of a concern here.
So...yay or nay?
var c = 8.0;console.log(c.toString() + '');
But after I posted my answer, not only did the existing answer get updated, but another similar answer was posted. Eventually my answer got downvoted - probably because others assumed I plagiarized from the other answer!