How should I answer questions that are of the form "look at this exception I saw"?
Background: I hit a (recent) bug in Python / Cython, manifesting itself in NumPy and in Pandas. I searched, and found two (1, 2) "questions" where people just reported "I got this exception". They were using three pieces of code affected. One question had a useful comment pointing to one of the bug reports I had found. The other question had comments where people assumed the problem was with the user or their code, because they assumed that NumPy / Python couldn't have this kind of bug — a bug they, in fact, have.
Neither question had answers.
My answer of the form "there is a bug, here it is [so you'd better work around it]" was deleted (presumably for not answering the question — I don't know). I provided exactly the information I would have needed to save significant searching to confirm this is a bug (it's a weird one, and leads one to question the underlying libraries, etc., because one doesn't usually expect stable, mature software like NumPy to have problems mutating its most fundamental numerical functions only when running the debugger).
My recent answer is exactly the kind of help I think people come to Stack Overflow for.
Should these questions have no answers? They represent real problems and seem exactly part of Stack Overflow's mission. Or should I improve my answer somehow for it to be undeleted? The only other meta.stackoverflow.com question applicable seems to say "yes, it's OK to tell people 'it can't be done'", so I have edited my (deleted) answer in case it helps people more now. If I had seen my "it's a real bug" answer myself, I would have thought "wow, that's great, I can move on now".
This post was deleted by So-And-So
, if only to avoid confusion when decisions are being disputed.