I have a simpler way to do it: you don't. Or more accurately, you are only interested in the answers anyways. If you are looking at your search terms and you find the question which ask exactly what you are having issues about, wouldn't you click it?
How to print "Hello World"? is a timeless question. It never expires, nor it becomes irrelevant. Stack Overflow is supposed to produce artifacts for future readers. These future readers don't care about the version 12 years ago of your language. They want the answer that solves their problems now. Those interest are best served by the answers themselves, instead of the question. Lets see an example of this working.
How do I undo the most recent local commits in Git?
Since 2009, Wikipedia counts at least 15 releases, including a change between 1.x to 2.x. The question since the start hasn't changed. Nor has the top answer. Now, some people may claim that git is a special case, because Linus Torvalds doesn't break stuff. But that's irrelevant. The relevant part is that the question is exactly the same back then, than today. Even if we had to do some kind of git revert --last-commit
or something, the question would've stayed the same, but now with two different answers that solve the problem.
For that reason, don't worry about whenever a answer was useful to your Python 3.8.3, just downvote it. And keep scrolling down until you find the one that works for you and upvote that one. That's how the system makes sure the top answer is useful for the higher share of users.
python
tag, and version-specific tags should only be added if the OP needs a version-specific answer. Unfortunately, the OP doesn't always know that they need a version-specific solution (eg, for Unicode questions), and answerers may neglect to add it for them. Also, there are tons of questions with version-specific tags, but no generic tag, so they slip under the radar of those who just watch the tag page (and annoy gold badgers who need to hammer them).raw_input()
,map
/filter
producing lists instead of generators and some other things hint towars 2.x as well - but if you are "new" they might not stand out that much