What's the problem with "this kind of situation"?
As noted already in this answer, this particular question you're asking about is a really unfortunate example. The author posted it and then abandoned it. As a result, while it got a very good answer to the question that was asked, it attracted the attention of other people who posted answers to this question-without-an-accepted-answer that were inappropriate for the question itself, but which found an audience in the people who sought out the question based on the title of the question.
For better or worse, this question now is a duplicate of the other one. The question really should have been closed as "typographical error". It's unlikely that the literal question is ever going to be similar enough to the mistake someone else makes that it and the correct answer to it would be useful to any future reader. But the questions to the incorrectly-interpreted question could be useful (though they really belong elsewhere), and closing this question as a duplicate can direct people to the better Q&A.
About your exact question:
should the answers be considered in these kinds of situations?
You might need to be clearer about what "these kinds of situations" actually means to you. That said, I'd say that in general, answers can and should be taken into account.
If by "these kinds of situations" you mean the situation as it stands today, then I would say yes, the posted answers should be taken into account. People are clearly using this question as a signpost for the more general question of checking for primality using Python, and the question should be closed so as to a) show people the way to the question with many more answers and which addresses the general question much more thoroughly, and b) to encourage anyone who thinks that after all this they still have something to contribute to post their contribution on the question that serves as a more appropriate canonical post, rather than this one.
If by "these kinds of situations" you mean the situation as it stood before the broader answers were posted, then even then valid answers to the question provide insight into what sort of existing questions might be suitable duplicate targets. I.e. if it happened that someone posted an answer that was essentially the same as one found elsewhere, and the author of the question accepted that answer, then the author of the question is telling you that the other question is in fact essentially a duplicate of their own question.
There are other kinds of "these kinds of situations" we might consider, such as questions with typographical errors, or questions where the author has abandoned the question, etc. But however one slices it, this particular example seems to have an unusual (perhaps unique) characteristic that would defeat an attempt to generalize further. I think at best, we mainly can talk about this question exactly, and cannot very well extend the conclusion to other questions, unless they somehow manage to have the exact same problems (which seems unlikely, though I admit I can't rule it out).
What do we do now?
Frankly, I think at this point, what ought to happen is that this question should be closed as a duplicate of the other, to let it serve as a signpost without allowing further contributions to it. There are as many useless answers to the question as there are useful ones, and it's clearly attracted undesirable attention in the form of answers that aren't going to help the author of this original question (that person is long gone), nor are going to help people who stumble across the question due to the title instead of the content.
Closing it would shut the question down (if we can get the community to agree and not get into a close/open war), preventing more useless answers while still directing people to where they really want to be.
Alternatively, the question could be closed and deleted. That's what should have happened when it was first posted, but it somehow slipped under the community moderation radar. It was never a useful question, being specific to the exact typographical error in the code, and the author of the question didn't even bother to accept the one answer that actually did address the question they actually asked.
If this is how the question is disposed, the three answers posted that are really answers to the duplicate target, should be moved over to that question, so that they aren't lost when this question of concern is deleted.
IMHO the first option is preferable, given that the title of the otherwise-legitimate duplicate target doesn't say nearly as clearly what the question is about as this question says what its duplicate target is about (even as it fails to accurately describe the problem that this question is actually asking about). This makes it a very good candidate as a sign-post.
But I wouldn't shed any tears if the second option was taken. It seems like an almost equally valid approach.
for
loop they're getting trapped in an infinitewhile
loop whena
is prime. A decent answer needs to address those two points. Once that's taken care of, the answer could mention improvements to the the primality test (eg, only testing divisors <=sqrt(a)
, and only testing odd divisors after checking thata
is odd). Simply dupe-hammering it to a language-agnostic question about primality testing is not appropriate.while
loop in their prime-checking code, so the question does a much better job serving as a signpost than it does as a place to find an answer to the question the author was actually asking. IMHO, if the question isn't closed as a duplicate, it needs to be deleted altogether, with the inappropriate answers moved to the duplicate target.