Recently I found a question about a jQuery plugin not working as expected.
The problem was extremely simple: the OP dind't realize that the library requires a license he doesn't own.
I understand that the question is unlikely to help anyone in the future, so I wondered if I should flag the question as "should be closed...". I was unsure and there were more experience users around at that moment, so I just pointed out the problem in a comment a let it go.
I came back to the question when the OP pinged me in a comment. It was not closed and got no answers so I decide to put together the info provided in my comments as an answer. The OP accepted it.
Some hours later my answer was deleted by a moderator for being link-only. I thought that links were OK because they pointed to comments in the very same question, so there is no risk that they become unavailable. Also, IMHO, the answer was clear even stripping out the links.
I guess that was a wrong assumption, so I edit the answer to provide context for the links. When I was done, I flag it as in need for moderator intervention:
I fixed this answer (considered link-only). I kindly request for undeletion.
The only feedback that I got so far is a downvote.
Because just 10k+ users can see deleted posts it is clear that a very experienced user thinks that the answer is wrong even after the update. But I am honestly confused about the reasons.
Some context:
A couple of weeks ago I started to work more often with the review queues. To see one of my answers deleted (and mainly without really understanding why) somehow disempowers me for the task.
I'd really like to have some feedback about how I acted wrongly. Some ideas:
The question was too localized so I...
- should have flag it.
- shouldn't have answered. A comment with the solution was enough.
But in the above cases, why the question has not gathered downvotes neither has been closed?
- There's nothing wrong with the question, my answer is just poor.
The answer is deleted, so I leave a screen-shot as reference: