I tend to write detailed questions about a problem that occurs in a general situation. For instance, recently I stumbled upon an issue where I want to read chunks of data quickly (to be used in a multiprocessing environment) by retrieving the file pointers of these chunks. The details are not important here, but I do do my best to make the general scenario as well as the specific problem as clear as possible. To this end I provide my thoughts as texts, the code that I have tried out, and often also testing data. This makes my main post already quite long. I always fear that the length of my posts will scare away readers, so I try to keep it to the point.
When I have posted a question, I am often continuously working on it afterwards. This means that I frequently make new discoveries that I think are relevant and useful for other readers. In practice this means that I have to add a few new paragraphs as well as a bunch of code - making the question even more scary at first sight.
Since many questions can often be solved in numerous ways, I tend to only keep the most favourable approach in my post. Or when I find out that one of my proposed ideas actually has fundamental flaws in it, I delete it from the post. I do not wish to keep adding information and findings, and annotating some with a warning 'I have found that this approach does not work, so please ignore.' as that does not seem to help anyone.
Still, it happens that someone reads part of my post and starts writing an answer, but in the meantime I found that my thoughts are flawed, so I delete it from the post. The answerer then replies to something that is not in the post any more, and frequently - if I was correct - their solution does not work anyway, as the reason that I deleted my idea in the first place was because there was a fundamental flaw in it. This happened in my most recent post, where someone got angry with me because I had edited out the part of the question they referred to. However, I only removed this part from the question because it contained a large assumption that did not hold (i.e. it turns out that byte sequences can still be chopped up initially), so the answerer's answer could never work.
Now, to get to my question: I understand this person's frustration - even though I don't think my changes warrant a downvote. I had added information to my main post, and afterwards removed it. They had worked on a solution with that information (even though they did not check their solution, otherwise they would have found that it did not suffice). In the end I did re-add the information that the user replied to, but nevertheless they did delete their answer. So what is the best thing to do here: keep all added information, even if further research finds that some of it cannot be used? Delete everything that is not relevant anymore? Of particular importance is the length of the post; new findings may make a post challenging to read through, especially if some parts are marked as not relevant. When adding all new found insights, the question might not invite users to read the whole thing.