I am an intermediate answerer within my tag, meaning I am usually knowledgeable enough to solve some of the simpler (syntactical/algorithmic) questions but not experienced enough to say with absolute certainty that my answer is the best solution to a question.
For example, I answered with this to one question (excerpt):
Likely the simplest way to do this would be to use list comprehension. This allows for the entire logic to be boiled down to a single line. ...
Should I have answered the question at all, given that I was not 100% certain; and if so, should I have included the "likely" at the beginning?
My reasoning is that the "likely" serves as additional noise, when my answer could have been completely certain, and, had my answer been wrong/ineffective, the answer itself would have been "noise" (although noise that's controlled by voting). This led me to a few possibilities for answering:
- Answer only when I am sure my answer is the best one
- Answer when I am reasonably certain of my answer, not including any uncertain language, and allow the voting/editing system to lead to revision/deletion if necessary
- Answer when I am reasonably certain, potentially including uncertain language ("probably," "likely," etc.), revising/deleting if necessary
There is a similar question on here that focuses on unsure answers, but only when the question itself isn't completely understood. I bring it up because of one (actually two but only at the end) comment on the second answer that applies:
"You should still post it as an answer to allow others to vet your post" - no, no, no! Answers are not the place for guesses. You're basically advocating that people, who are unsure whether their answer will actually answer the question, should just go ahead and post it, hoping that someone knowledgeable will come along, properly analyse the answer (and not just vote on it by the looks of it) and downvote it if it's incorrect. That's not how answers work. ... This site is a place for clear, unambiguous questions with definitive answers.
Which leads me to think that the first possibility I outlined is the correct choice (or at least the third one is incorrect).
The main point of this question is that the answer I gave is currently the accepted answer, which wouldn't have been possible if I hadn't answered (although I'm sure someone else could've provided a similar solution). Additionally, I would like to answer questions if I am able to, although I won't if doing so would lead to low-quality answers.
I understand that I'm asking about only a single word, but I want to ensure I'm answering questions in the best way possible.
GoodAPI()
instead ofDeprecatedAPI()
unless there's a good reason for it.") or maybe for edge cases not mentioned elsewhere