I stumbled upon this from help center which seems problematic to me and I would like to clarify if I got it right.
The page says:
Do not copy the complete text of sources; instead, use their words and ideas to support your own. In particular, answers comprised entirely of a quote (sourced or not) will often be deleted since they do not contain any original content.
So imagine this situation:
You provide an answer that is taken from official docs of some library (it even could be a language specification like C standard), however, there isn't really anything to add or remove.
So this answer while clearly being still useful, would be considered for deletion according to the above quote. Did I get that right?
But maybe I am interpreting it too strictly and maybe adding few words like "hey yeah this is not the way to use function f
, and here is sentence to back it up" suffices in practice. In that case maybe Help Center can make it clearer.
In this question the answer says actually quote only answers can be ok and aren't forbidden - but to me the way it is written in Help center suggests quote only answers will likely be deleted. So I guess I would change the wording there.
XYZ
and ensure you pass the value'abc'
for the parameter named def." Just putting you're own TL;DR to summarise is fine, as you're then using the documentation to backup your statement; which also (in this case) is more verbose on the subject should other users wish to read it.'31/12/2020'
to adate
in T-SQL." I would suggest that they didn't do any research. If it was "How do I convert the value'31/12/2020'
to adate
in T-SQL. I tried the style code103
from the documentation, but it didn't work." that suggests that they did research. (Such a question would still likely get downvotes for a lack of [mre], but there is evidence of they at least searched the problem.)