I agree with you, and in all of my years of contributing to Stack Overflow, I have always followed essentially the same approach that you describe. (Well, generally, I don't test my code. I prefer to just write it in the Markdown editor directly. But I do review it thoroughly to make sure that it is correct and thoroughly explained before hitting the "Submit" button.) **Regardless of what anyone else may be doing, please continue doing what you are doing; it is for the best, both for you, for the asker, and for the overall community.** Even though some may treat it like one, Stack Overflow is not a race. Our content is meant to stand the test of time. The reputation system fundamentally values *quality*, not speed. While the fastest answerer might accrue more reputation from that answer in the short term, if their answer is not actually the best answer on the page, then they won't be the "winner" in terms of reputation in the long term. Therefore, while it may seem like there's some sort of built-in bias against you, rest assured that is only from short-term effects. Overall, those who write clear, useful, well-explained, correct answers will come out on top. And, even in the short term, it's likely that your answer will be most useful to the asker, which tends to lead to an accept (green checkmark). As far as your proposal regarding "etiquette", I don't really think this is an ethics issue, but I do think it is good etiquette (and common sense) to make sure that you are submitting a quality answer when you decide to submit. It doesn't have to be the perfect answer—continued improvements are welcome and encouraged. And it seems that no matter how many times I read over something before submitting, there's always at least one typo or unclear sentence that needs to be fixed later. That's just the nature of writing, and it's why we have editing—both collaborative and by the author. I've long had a *major* issue with people who FGITW a complete turd (this is a technical term) into the answer box. In fact, as a moderator, if I *catch* you doing this (i.e., before you polish it into something reasonable and worthy of submission), I *will* nuke that answer (downvote and mod-delete, which prevents it from being undeleted) for the same reasons that I'd nuke any other exceptionally low-quality contribution. There is at least one other moderator and one CM who will do the same thing. This strikes at something you allude to: what is a "minimum viable answer". I think we all know what it is. [The Help Center attempts to define it](https://stackoverflow.com/help/answering). Essentially, it is one that is coherent and that provides an actual answer to the question. Source code is *not* required in answers, so if you prefer to quickly post an answer with a brief explanation, and then go back later to add some "demo" code, that's fine. That's a reasonable use of FGITW. So is going back later to add in links (e.g., to the documentation and/or for further reading). And coming back later to add in an alternate approach. And any of a zillion of other things that involve *appending* the answer, not *creating* it. **If you come across something that doesn't meet our definition (or any reasonable person's definition) of a "minimum viable answer", then please flag it.** It doesn't matter how old it is, or which user posted it. Stack Overflow only cares about content, not metadata. A "not an answer" flag or a "very low quality" answer flag is appropriate on an answer whenever that answer meets the criteria for those flags. If that flag results in the answer being deleted, well, then you've contributed to improving the quality of the site. If the flag gets invalidated because the answer was edited to turn it into something reasonable in the meantime, well, at least the problem was addressed and the quality of content on the site was improved. The same goes for *downvoting* those answers (when you earn [the privilege](http://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/vote-down) to do so). You might later need to reverse the downvote on answers by people who behave unethically, but at least your downvote sent a signal in the meantime that the answer did not meet your standards for a minimally viable answer.