Before going into details, I'd like to mention that I consider any post older than 60 days to be an old post.
Recently (more accurately, last month), I have gotten into the habit of picking up some older questions in the pandas and improving them by either
- Voting on the question and/or answers
- Editing answers to improve relevancy (if the edits are minor)
- Flagging, deleting plagiarised content, and
- If it really deserves it, answering the question myself.
Or all of the above. I usually only answer the question when I know I have something substantial to contribute over the existing answers, such as in situations where the existing answers are inaccurate, incomplete, or out-of date.
Recently, a user pointed out on two separate occasions that my actions on older questions was not useful to the community. I will not link that user directly, but these are their comments, posted under two separate answers that I found unsettling:
It's particularly problematic because the details of which methods are good for which cases often change, and so having very lengthy, deep dive answers on SO is not only not as useful as having it in the pandas official documentation, but often is even harmful or misleading because some change to the function internals can suddenly make the answer incorrect or factually wrong and it's not clearly linked to the actual source repo to flag for documentation updating.
This comment from the user criticises "deep-dive" posts (the kind of posts I enjoy writing, especially to older questions), but I understand where they are coming from, so, fine. However, this comment from them on another answer of mine was a little different:
This seems more appropriate as a set of suggested updates to the accepted answer. In general I've seen a number of answers from you that follow that pattern.. it probably would help the community more rather than fracturing where the info is located on the page by splitting current-version "update" answers into standalone answers elsewhere on the page (just a suggestion).
I understand there is a lack of context because I have not linked to the post. But, under this particular question, the currently accepted answer to this particular question was somewhat terse, and one of the options used a deprecated method. In my answer, I referenced the accepted answer in juxtaposition to my suggested approaches. I explained that the current answer was deprecated, and how the updated answer would be for today's version of pandas.
However, this user's argument is that I should refrain from posting completely, and just stick to editing other existing answers, especially for "update" answers which signal that the existing answers are deprecated. Now, my arguments against this are
- I would understand if the question had a collaborative-lock. But these questions are open, meaning contributions in answer form are welcome.
- Neither the question, nor the answers are community wiki'd.
- There exists the Necromancer badge that encourages knowledge sharing on older posts.
There are also well reputed users such as @AaronHall and this guy who make a living out of answering old questions.
So, to summarise... in light of the pushback I've received, I thought it would be good to take a step back and figure out when older questions deserve an answer. More specifically, if an answer is outdated, must it always be required that you update the answer yourself, instead of posting your own answer, even if the edit is not trivial?