I'm concerned about one of my reviews from triage queue that got disputed yesterday:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/22112679
The reason why I still think this is a useful answer which should not have been deleted are as follows:
- The answer comes from the OP, so it is probably the one and only answer to the OPs question.
- It contains the most important relevant information in text.
- Therefore it is complete even without the link.
It would have even been enough to say and accept as answer
Increasing JVM Heap space solved it!
This is 36 chars and thus above the legit minimum of 30 chars. Anyone with Java experience knows how to increase JVM available memory using the -Xmx
command line parameter - there are several ways depending on the actual Java application in question and how it is launched (operating system service, from command line, shell script, double-click on a .jar file, etc.). The link given IMHO is just additional information on one method to achieve this and is not required for this to be useful.
Calling for link-only-answer
here in my eyes is not appropriate while I don't say this is a high quality answer. I would have understood downvotes by people asking for a more detailed explanation in comments area. On the other hand: how often do new users with 1rep come back after 4.5 months and answer their question? Most of them madly stay unanswered for ever (beside answers never getting accepted, but that's off topic).
Disclaimer:
I'm quite new to the review stuff. This dispute beside failed review audits triggered either an automatic or manually moderated(?) 4 day ban from all review queues - so yes I have made mistakes. I'm not bagging for unban, but outing here my possible mistake and possibly still wrong thinking in order to get additional opinions and learn doing better reviews in future. So far it seems to me this might have been an accidental deletion as none of the users that voted for deletion have any Java background (solely judged from Stack Overflow activity!) and it feels like I'm just in collateral 'damage'.