last day (14 days later) » 

19:36
joined
The question "where is i" strictly speaking DOES have an answer
the answer is implementation-specific
The asker does not know this
So, we want to clear this misconception, no?
correct, and I tried to tell OP about that
That's a great thing to put in the comment. However, it is not itself an answer to the question.
hmmm....
Answers are for answering the question. The question has an answer, when you consider implementations.
19:38
I don't agree. An answer is also to help OP clear whatever misunderstanding they have
In this case, the answer is "No one knows"
But that's incorrect.
I know where i is stored when I run the program on my computer, because I know where my implementation stores variables with automatic duration.
from the posted question, no one can know
That's nothing more than pretending that implementations don't exist.
Implementations do exist.
19:40
yes, but OP posted c code - no mentioning of system
It's unreasonable to assume that the poster is only interested in what the standard says.
If I ask you, "Can you pass the salt?" And you say, "Yes."
Strictly speaking, you have answered the question.
However, such behavior is unreasonable and unhelpful.
So how would you answer general c-questions
with a system specific answer?
Well, it depends
In this case, you can say that "On most systems it works this way"
And you can mention that the standard doesn't explicitly say so
This also applies to questions that assume CHAR_BIT = 8 or things like that
That answer was already there - I think it was yours
Practically speaking, CHAR_BIT = 8
19:43
I didn't wanted to repeat what others had already covered perfectly
Of cause I could have copied (stolen...) from others but I don't do that
Fair, but when you read the answer by itself none of that comes across
But I still think I had some important extra information that OP could use
Yes, and that's a good reason to leave a comment
I probably should add a reference to the other answer, true
Or, if you think that existing answers could be expanded, you can suggest an edit
19:45
For the last part, I had a funny experience just the other day
I high rep user asked if he could edit my question
I said yes
and the edit looked good to me at first
then I started to get all sorts of comments pointing about various minor problems
with the stuff edited by the other user
so I'm not really in the mood for changing other answers or other changing mine
I can relate to that, sometimes I get upset with comments needling me about tangential issues with an answer
Anyway, as I understand you, you want me to remove my answer
I didn't really have a resolution in mind
I understand some of your arguments but not all
ok, which resolution did you have in mind then?
I would rather leave that decision to you
It's a gray area, and I'm just trying to "push" the community towards answers that are more generally informative rather than technically informative (not sure how to phrase that)
I've seen a few blog posts recently on HN or Reddit complaining about the experience on Stack Overflow from the perspective of those outside the community, and it's been on my mind recently
19:54
okay, I'll think about it. Just a last comment: I'm not one of the hostile language lawyers. I'm in fact very helpful to newbies in cases where others (and especially high reps) downvotes and closes their question in very short time. But then again - my behavior is also disliked by those.
It's a tough problem. I admit that I had misjudged what you were trying to do--I thought you were trying to language-lawyer out of addressing the question, when you were really trying to add more information to the discussion.
Now that that's clear, I'm just going to upvote and move on.
Thanks. Have a good one.

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