does OP want to explain what that line means on its own, or how it interacts with the rest? There will be three different interpretations of the question in three different answers if I post my own - which is exactly what cv-unclear tries to prevent
Poor guy. @JanDvorak I've updated my answer a bit. Tried to break down the loops so he could understand what is happening. I think that would have explained it best.
@JanDvorak OP wants understanding of what that lines mean. Which angle you chose to tackle the problem is your own choice. Having multiple possible, valid answers does not make something unclear or TB
@FrankerZ I'd use "iteration" instead of "loop" though, but it may be confusing for a newbie
@JanDvorak You can take a decent enough guess on this one. I'm not saying it applies well everywhere but for newbie Qs (or this one at least) it was fairly obvious.
ooh, so he was asking about the difference between foo = foo + bar and foo + bar alone. I believe that's a dupe then. Also, I believe that @FrankerZ's answer doesn't explain the difference.
Let me do that before we move on then - Yes, the question lacked clarifications about what exactly was understood and what was not. Despite this, there was enough information provided to give a decent explanation of the code so future readers can better understand this kind of statement. I'd argue it's a borderline case, worthy of attention but not necessarily of closing.
@FrankerZ In that case too broad. I read it as request for other resources due to the way the OP has tried other resources. It would make sense that they are still looking.
We've ignored maintaining the Teams page, sorry about that. If you have been around for at least 3 months and have 2k messages you can request access to join. Please let the RO's do the approving.
@dorukayhan With a [cv-pls] request, please provide an actual close reason (i.e. one of the reasons selectable through the close dialog). It's fine to provide additional info, particularly if it's information that helps people quickly evaluate the question (e.g. which code block/line to look in for a typo, a comment made by the OP, debugging (no MCVE) w/ no code at all, etc.). However, each request should include the actual close reason(s) under which you believe the question should be closed.
If I come across a question where the OP edited his final answer into the question itself, but the question is from 2012, should I just leave it? (This one: http://stackoverflow.com/q/10703513/5764553)
That's a tough one.., maybe he even got votes for it (on question for answer)... you could extract answer, make a wiki answer, but yeah it would maybe be nice with link in question to op answer. Maybe it would make a nice meta question to understand what community thinks in these cases
@AndrewMyers well it was an interesting situation since the question seems to have been upvoted because of the answer, hence if answer is moved it will restart at 0... so yeah you would at least need a comment under question explaining this, anyway ping OP and lets see