Ok, so a few days in this question has attracted a lot more attention than I expected, and it has taken a turn I didn't expect - I thought I stopped playing [**Fastest Gun In The West**](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/9731/fastest-gun-in-the-west-problem) a long time ago, but clearly I still am. I will not mark any answer as accepted; who am I to judge a subject that much more seasoned SO users can't fully agree on. I'll let the votes speak for themselves. Instead, here are the conclusions ***I*** drew from the discussion to summarize for future reference (TL;DR at the bottom) 1. Don't ever post **long** code-only answers - they are useless for future visitors (I never have, never will - and that type of answers were not the subject of my questions at all, but did come up in discussion). 2. It is OK to play FGITW - in fact it is one of the things that make SO so popular. There is no clear consensus on whether playing FGITW is good or bad - or rather: there is no clear consensus on the exact rules of the game (which is only natural in the wild wild west I suppose). 3. It is **not OK** to post a *placeholder*. All initial answers **must** comply with the *minimal standards* - which I cannot find(!) though I easily found a description of a [*good answer*](http://stackoverflow.com/help/how-to-answer). Lacking an official description of what exactly *minimal standards* imply, I will repeat the criterion suggested by [T.J. Crowder](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/users/157247/t-j-crowder): "*Suppose your network connection disappears / your power goes out / etc. the instant you post your answer. Is it useful as is? No? Then keep writing before posting.*" 4. You can always make your OK answer into a good answer or your good answer into an excellent answer no matter how many edits it takes - but never post a crappy answer even if you intend to improve it. 5. Code-only answers **can** meet the *minimal standards*, but **rarely do**. Therefore most of them pass through the *Very Low Quality* review queue, and get a lot of negative exposure, even if they solve the problem at hand. Do not try to cheat your way around this mechanism by adding static to your initial post. 6. If you do post a quick half-assed answer to get in first, it is likely that someone going through the VLQ-queue will downvote or negatively comment on it before you can elaborate, and it is unlikely that this will be reversed even though the quality of your answer increases. Don't worry about the fact that you are causing this extra "work load" though - the effort needed is minimal. 7. You **can** write a disclaimer stating "*I am currently elaborating on this*" in a comment or in your answer **in addition** to your initial answer that meets the *minimal standards* - however, adding this "static" is as likely to further annoy someone who already dislikes your answer, as it is to convince anyone something better is on it's way... so I doubt *I* will do it. Yes, I am aware that there's a minor conflict between `5` and `7`, but since `7` was a popular suggestion I wanted to include it anyway - get on with your life! ##Bottom line(s):## * The current state of the system clearly and actively encourages playing FGITW - this ensures that "what's wrong with this code" questions are usually answered really fast. * But the system is also very effective in sorting through posts and giving more long-term attention to questions and answers of a more general nature - typically not those that are subjected to FGITW games. **You can earn a lot of rep by being a sloppy, but fast gun slinger. If you want actual recognition you will need to shoot accurately.**