I noticed some of my recent NAA flags were disputed and I have a hard time understanding why. I understand that the community (or a moderator?) decides the result of a flag and I respect that. However I have been reviewing these cases in particular and I keep coming to the conclusion that I would flag them again if I saw them for the first time.
It feels like there is some fine line between a true NAA and what I have flagged as NAA, and it is unclear to me.
Below are 3 cases, for each I explain my interpretation of them.
How can I add to List<? extends Number> data structures?
"Here is a link named after something you don't understand, read it and your question will be answered. Oh here is another link".
Expand/Collapse Lollipop toolbar animation (Telegram app)
"This library makes everything simple. Check this tutorial. Here is a link to an app. Here is another link"
What is PECS (Producer Extends Consumer Super)?
"I already answered this, here is a link to it. Also here is some info that you won't understand unless you already know the answer"
To my understanding, these are all textbook NAA. When to flag an answer as "not an answer"?:
The rule-of-thumb here is to strip the markup; if you can still regard it as an (attempted) answer without the link, it is still an answer and should not be flagged.
Strip the mark up -> what remains? -> nothing useful. Yet the flags were all disputed.
I am looking for an explanation on why the answer is not NAA for each of these 3. I sincerely do not understand.
I did not come here to discuss my voting behavior. Only the flags.
Previous to the edit in Rev 2, the dupe was a good one, because it answered the question as I had phrased it. However it was not the answer I was looking for and it was my bad for phrasing the question that way.