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Why are users allowed to accept their own answer, when it does not solve the problem they ask? Here is an example:

Excel VBA macro runs from the VBA editor but not from the Macro window

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    How do you suppose the system should detect (automatically, without other users intervention) whether OPs answer really solves their problem? Mar 13 at 3:46
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    "when it does not solve the problem they ask?" ... and how should the site detect that?
    – Tom
    Mar 13 at 3:46
  • So the solution is to flag the answer as "Not an answer" and the reason the answer is still the accepted answer 7 years later is because nobody flagged and/or because the mods don't review downvoted answers?
    – GoWiser
    Mar 13 at 3:50
  • @Tom "How should the system automatically detect that?". The system could detect self-accepted answers with a negative usefulness.
    – GoWiser
    Mar 13 at 3:59
  • @AbdulAzizBarkat "How should the system automatically detect that?". The system could detect self-accepted answers with a negative usefulness.
    – GoWiser
    Mar 13 at 4:00
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    @GoWiser Having a downvote does not necessarily imply that the answer does not solve the problem in the question. What's the benefit of the system trying to prevent such occurences anyway? 1) Accepting is up to the questioner. 2) Self-accepts don't give any reputation. 3) Accepts don't even influence the sort order (They used to be pinned at the top earlier) Mar 13 at 4:12
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    Note that the accept only means that it helps the asker the most, no matter how bad it is. It doesn't and never mean the best answer. Also, it's not the mods' task to review downvoted answers.
    – Andrew T.
    Mar 13 at 4:14
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    Tangentially, the user hasn't visited SO for more than 3 years, so it's unlikely they will change the acceptance.
    – Andrew T.
    Mar 13 at 4:19
  • @AndrewT. "It's not the mods' task to review downvoted answer". I wrote downvoted AND self-answered. And it's not the mods task, if they chose not to, that's right. I want to say thank you for your comments, they are very enlightening, and provides a good understanding of the culture here and how answers like this is the accepted answer, even 7 years later.
    – GoWiser
    Mar 13 at 4:49
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    You should not, in general, flag answers that are simply incorrect as "not an answer".. However, that particular answer is indeed not an answer, as it does not even attempt to answer any question (just saying the problem went away and they're still looking for an explanation), so you could flag it and we'd probably delete it (indeed, that has now happened).
    – Ryan M Mod
    Mar 13 at 5:14
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    We don't review answers for correctness because, in general, we don't know the right answer. We're not specialists in every single technology. We can, however, tell if an answer clearly doesn't even try to answer any question; that one does not, so it can be flagged and deleted.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Mar 13 at 5:16
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    @GoWiser As comments tried to tell you, it takes an actionable strategy to change things. Just because the end result would be nice doesn’t mean we know how to actually achieve it at scale. Mar 13 at 7:03
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    FWIW, I am not sure why you focus on self-accepted answers. If you have a problem with wrong answers being accepted and your only criteria is downvotes, then this seems to apply to answers by non-OPs as well. Mar 13 at 8:42
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    Why is this even a problem? Answer acceptance is practically meaningless. If it were up to me, that feature would have been removed long ago so people can stop misinterpreting it.
    – Gimby
    Mar 13 at 13:13

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