Should I just rewrite my answer completely when I wrote the code entirely new and different. OR should I make the answer extra long and add it as edit?
@BhargavRao I just read the answer again and there isn't much similarity from the old and new code, so I think I will rewrite it entirely but write why and what I changed and what makes the difference to the old code. (Old code 100,000 runs: 4.4 sec. New code 100,000 runs: 1.4 sec <- So quite an improvement there)
I think this is an off-topic question, as it appears to be about configuration of an elasticsearch cluster - a use problem, not a programming problem. Thoughts? stackoverflow.com/q/32253052/1677912
@TylerH No, you're right - I was saying the new one is a copy of part of the accepted, and is therefore a thanks... but just NAA would likely get rejected by a Mod. If the masses get to it due to either flag, it will probably get deleted before a mod sees it.
What the guy should consider doing is specifying his particular setup that makes his answer correct for it. Because upvotes and downvotes on other answers reflect nothing for future readers
@BhargavRao I think @Tunaki and @Drew have provided OP with way enough data to correct his post. If not fixed (as it is now it doesn't add enough to be more than a comment), it should be deleted or turned into a comment
On the other hand, that answer's only 18 minutes old as of now. Probably worth checking back tomorrow to make sure there are no more promoting the same URL.