I was looking at a question about how to get TFS and Git to play well together with Visual Studio, and noted a comment referring me to an answer on another question. It turns out it was a clever, high-value answer that fixed the issue of the original question.
More importantly, the old fixes listed in the answers to the original question no longer worked for the most recent versions of Visual Studio. That is, this comment is currently the only link to a viable answer to the question for users of recent version of Visual Studio.
Since the linked answer was a useful, creative fix for a problem whose earlier solutions no longer worked, I recommended that the commenter add their answer to the question I was reading now.
Turns out they had added it. And it had been deleted!
What's the right thing to do here? Flag for intervention?
Is there a way to see why the original moderator deleted the answer? It is a little unorganized and narrative, which isn't ideal, but is an excellent answer to the issue at hand. I'd be happy to edit it if that's the issue. Maybe it's the visual-studio-2013
tag and the implication is a new question should be asked?
Which leads me to... I'm surprised the moderator didn't put a comment on the answer before deleting (or if they did, the comment is deleted now). I suppose you might assume someone at around 3k (like the answer's author) knows Stack Overflow okay, so perhaps the moderator thought they should know better than to be this colloquial and narrative, but the answer's author, if I read into the comment a bit, seemed a little surprised it was deleted as well.
In any event, a good answer is missing. Should I do something to put it back?