There was a short (2-sentence) question asked which got a short answer:
- the first iteration of the answer said "No" (with some non-printable characters to fit the minimum character limit)
- the answer was a bit later edited so that the text was a link which pointed to the answer itself (presumably for additional tongue-in-cheek character).
Note that "no" is a clear and correct answer to the short question (the question is of the form "Can I do [thing] without [obvious prerequisite]?").
An hour later delete-from-review autocomments started appearing, claiming that
- the answer is link-only, and
- the answer is not an answer.
Neither claims are correct, so I argued a bit with one of the reviewers and flagged both auto-comments as no longer needed (the LQP review item got 4 unanimous "recommend deletion" votes, but the positive score of the answer stopped the review process).
A bit later my comment flags were marked helpful, but the comments stayed, and ChrisF deleted the answer and left the following comment:
Mark this as a duplicate rather than posting a link to another answer. – ChrisF♦
What ChrisF didn't do is close the question as the duplicate of another question...since there is no duplicate question; the link in the answer was self-referential. I assumed that the moderator misread something so I left a custom moderator flag:
The moderator who handled this post seems to have made a grave mistake. They deleted this answer claiming that the answerer should post it on the duplicate instead rather than linking there. The mod didn't close the question as duplicate. One reason for this is that the link was pointing to this very answer. Yes, it's tongue-in-cheek, but it was an answer, and the link didn't point anywhere. The answer should not have been deleted with this reasoning. Please fix it. Thank you.
This is now
declined - The post is way too far off base. A joke link violates the Be Nice policy, and given that there is a better more complete answer I see no reason to resurrect this.
(The "more complete answer" basically says "No, unless you have [prerequisite].".)
tl;dr 4 reviewers and a moderator mistook a tongue-in-cheek yet valid answer as something else, or something inappropriate.
Is this simply a corollary of us hating fun? The question was obviously misguided in the sense that just "No" is a perfectly valid answer. Do/should we ignore the grossly wrong review decisions and the seemingly contradictory mod deletion because of the self-link in the answer? Is such an answer really Not Nice?
Correction: BoltClock made me aware that the link in the answer wasn't intentionally self-referential, it only turned out that way by mistake. The URL looks like a link to a comment made by another user on the question, but the ID in the link is replaced by that of the answer, thereby redirecting readers to the answer itself. The corresponding comment on the question explains that the question is somewhat nonsense to begin with.