I have in my flagging history a declined "Not an answer" flag that I'm having a hard time understanding. I hesitated to make a post because the flag is months old by now and because a single declined flag isn't the end of the world, but I just spent some time reading a lot of similar questions (and their answers) and I'm still curious exactly what happened with my flag.
The answer I flagged: https://stackoverflow.com/a/47045151
The quick breakdown of what happened, from my perspective, is:
- OP asked "how can I change the status bar color?"
- Someone answered "use
setStatusBarBackgroundColor()
" - OP posted a new answer saying "Omg.... I did not know setStatusBarBackgroundColor() existed..." (verbatim; that's the whole post)
- I flagged the post
- OP edited their "OMG" answer to its current state
My understanding is that edits automatically "dispute" NAA flags, so the moderator must have declined my flag before the post was edited. (Please, correct me if I am wrong here.)
Having read other meta posts about "Not an answer" flags, I understand that this flag is meant for situations where the post really truly contains no kernel of an answer. In its current form, I can accept that what's left is just a really bad answer but an answer nonetheless. However, pre-edit it is blatantly a post that should have been a comment.
So, to finally make my question(s) crystal clear: Does
Omg.... I did not know
setStatusBarBackgroundColor()
existed...
fall within "an attempt was made to answer the question" just because it includes the correct method to call (or for some other reason I can't see)?
Does it not matter that this (to my eyes) is very obviously something that should be a comment on the original (and accepted) answer?
Edit: I believe this question is not a duplicate because I'm not simply interested in whether or not a specific post is "not an answer;" I'm curious about how the poster's edits interact with my flag and how moderators would consider the before/after edit post.