TL;DR
Remove the VLQ flag and instead add flags for link-only and non-English answers that have the same effect as NAA flags but provide better guidance for flaggers.
The Very low-quality flag for answers has been a source of confusion for years and lead to feature requests in the past, like
- Merge the "Not An Answer" and "Very Low Quality" flags into one
- Is there any reason to keep the "very low quality" flag? If not, can we remove it immediately? If so, can we rename it to something correct?
I have a new and somewhat more concrete idea about what to do with the VLQ flag. Flagging will be easier for flaggers and behind the scenes, while nothing changes for moderators or reviewers.
The VLQ flag has some strange and unique properties:
- cannot flag posts: older than 7 days, with positive score, in review
- any edit marks it helpful (even removing posts from the LQA queue)
- auto-downvote under some circumstances.
Apart from that, it's not clear how its use cases differ from those of the NAA flag and if you read other discussions, it looks like an "R/A light" flag. The guidance in the flag dialog is not a great help either:
- NAA: "This was posted as an answer, but it does not attempt to answer the question. It should possibly be an edit, a comment, another question, or deleted altogether."
- VLQ: "This answer has severe formatting or content problems. This answer is unlikely to be salvageable through editing, and might need to be removed."
Is there a theoretical answer you could say is NAA but not VLQ (or the other way round), especially following the above guidance? Do "I have the same problem. Did you find a solution?" or "Your answer helped me. Thank you" not also have severe content problems and are unlikely to be salvageable through editing?
From my experience, the typical NAA/VLQ answers are of the following kinds:
- Classical NAA: "I have the same problem...", "I have a similar problem/follow-up question...", "Thank you so much for the answer..." etc. which are clearly not attempts at answering a question.
- Link-only answer: "Have a look at this [article](...)" with all of the answer hidden behind the link and becoming useless once the link breaks.
- Non-English answer.
Link-only and non-English answers are singled out as they are a bit of edge cases. A "true" link-only answer may be considered an attempt at answering a question and the link may lead to an excellent answer, but it's still not considered an answer because SO wants to be the place where you find answers, not just links to them. And the non-English post may be an actual answer and perhaps even include code and the non-English text may boil down to "Try this". For sure, such posts are most likely salvageable through editing and that's where the VLQ flag's property came in handy.
That's why I suggest turning the VLQ flag for answers into two new flags that are functionally (almost) equivalent to the NAA flag. The property of an edit marking the flag helpful is something that may make sense. The rest of the flag dialog would stay the same:
- spam
- rude or abusive
- not an answer
- link only
- not in English
- in need of moderator intervention
The purpose and point of the suggestion is to improve the UI for the flagger. Since the new flags have basically the same effect as NAA flags, nothing changes for moderators or reviewers and the guidance remains the same. They do not even need to know which kind of flag was originally used and, for example, you could flag a link-only answer as NAA or link-only answer (or even "not in English") because it leads to the same result. But the flags now
- reflect the posts that should be flagged as NAA
- are more intuitive since they describe the posts flaggers encounter often
- the description in the flag dialog can be improved and become proper guidance, e.g. in the case of link-only answers explain with few words that it's for answers that contain no answer to the question in the post itself and where the link itself is not the answer. Even the NAA description could be improved to say it's not for wrong answers.
Note that this is not about VLQ flags for questions which are also problematic but for different reasons. One of them is that flags for closure are hidden behind a "needs improvement" option, but that's for a different MSO discussion.
Also interesting how the Privileges: flag posts page notes that "very low quality" means "no amount of editing can salvage the post" yet an edit marks the flag helpful and removes the answer from the LQA queue.