I hope this is not a duplicate of Is it okay to repost outdated or obsolete questions? which does not deal with this strange case of a totally misleading and accepted answer which is by far the strongest in votes and appearance.
Quoting the comment there:
But what if you first think to get the answer from an accepted answer, and that turns out to be a wrong solution? See Would a new question on how to update Anaconda be in line with the community if there is already a similar but messy and old 500k views question?. Such questions offer the right answer, but few will find it, which should give way to open a new question instead.
There is an existing question with 500k views, How do I update Anaconda?. Thinking about a new question, before I catch a lot of downvotes and the question gets closed as a duplicate, I better check whether such a new question would be backed up by the community.
The new question would be as follows (with the spin-off as the question to be replaced):
Question Title:
Windows: In 09/2021, How do I update Anaconda in Anaconda Prompt command line to get the most recent stable collection of packages?
Question body:
This is a Spin-off from How do I update Anaconda? which is a mess. The highly accepted answer leads with the claim to show what 95 % of the people want, although the offered solution can lead to unstable environment. There are partly contradicting comments and advices and the right answers are probably not clear enough. There were meta discussions in the past that came to the conclusion that such questions should be closed and asked again.
Therefore the same question again.
Setting:
- 05.09.2021
- Windows 10
- Anaconda
- base environment
- some virtual environments
In Administrator mode of the Anaconda prompt and searching only for a command line solution:
How do I update the whole Anaconda so that I get a stable and in these contraints most recent setting of packages for the exact date of 05.09.2021? I try to reach this in all of my environments (base and virtual). My aim is to get one clear command line example for the given date which then can serve as an example for the future.
I am not sure whether it helps to add a Windows setting, I can take that out, since the way to update should be the same on Linux. On the other hand, you can choose OS + Anaconda version at the official docs' available Anaconda versions (which is, funny enough, not sorted by date), and then, a precise example for the Windows case should be even better. Therefore my guess is that choosing Windows will help solving the same on Linux, but choosing no OS will just make the question vague.
The solution to the question is already in the the docs: Updating from older versions. Yet, many people will not look up the docs but take the first hit of Stack Overflow instead, to find the question (07/2017) being upvoted 308 times, the accepted answer (07/2017) being upvoted 483 times, and the right answer (11/2019) being upvoted just 30 times. I myself have upvoted the wrong, but accepted answer. You believe it at first sight, I did not expect to search for the right metapackage when I just want to have the most recent Anaconda installer, the --all
was much more appealing. I also did not expect the "30 votes answer" to be up-to-date, who should expect a solution that uses a 05/2021
command to be the most recent metapackage install on 05.09.2021?
Do you support opening the quoted new question? And if so, is there any change needed to avoid downvotes and closing?