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When reviewing the close queue, I'm frequently seeing people claiming "this is not an answer" on potential solutions phrased as a question. Sample:

https://stackoverflow.com/a/52975639/119549

Like if someone says:

Does it work if you add this line of code?

...it really means the same thing as:

You should add this line of code.

...only phrased in a way that some people hold conversations when trying to help them solve a problem. Should we really close things of the former pattern as "not an answer" and ask them to post as a new question when it's obviously not them actually asking a question?

Update:

I think the "duplicate" question does cover the same topic, but it doesn't have sufficient clarification for my specific case. I think people are being literal and say "a question is not an answer, therefore this is not an answer." Given how frequently this happens, I think it'd be good to communicate this specific case.

Update 2:

OK, the close reason I think is wrong, but Should we avoid rhetorical questions in answers? is definitely a real dupe.

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The NAA flag isn't appropriate for those kind of answers anyways, since there's an attempt to answer the question.

That the introductory phrase is formulated as a question doesn't matter.

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    Agree. But it's still not a good answer and would be better as a comment. It completely fails to explain why these two lines would make a difference so it is unclear if this is just random guessing or a fact based answer.
    – BDL
    Oct 24, 2018 at 20:55
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    @BDL Even then NAA is wrong, and VLQ would be the appropriate flag. Or at least editing and reformulate would be the right path of action. Oct 24, 2018 at 20:57
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    @BDL Bad answers don't belong in comments. Bad answers need to be curated by downvotes, something you can't do to a comment.
    – Davy M
    Oct 24, 2018 at 21:47

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