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Why the 15 character minimum on comments?

Can I tell you how I feel? Can I state my opinion? If not please stop reading now. If you do care please continue.

I feel like SO is a good resource and has the potential to be great. The main thing holding me back is this attitude that it's perfect. That it doesn't need to be improved. That no one can add anything better to it.

I think it's this attitude that's creating all these frustrations using this site. A good site in my definition does not get in the way of what I'm trying to do. This site gets in my way more often than not.

  • I would like to write "Thank you" to the people that respond but SO requires you to type 15 characters.
  • I want to type "Ok" or "I understand" but SO requires me to say more.
  • I want to type "YES" to a question but that's not enough text for Stack Overflow.
  • I want to type "Please elaborate" but it's not 15 characters.
  • I want to type "What do you mean?" but it's not 15 characters.
  • I want to type "Explain" but it's not 15 characters.
  • I want to type "No" but it's not 15 characters.

Does Stack Overflow get in the way? You tell me? "You tell me" is not 15 characters. Does it matter that I have a suggestion for an improvement? I don't know. "I don't know" is not 15 characters. We'll see. "We'll see" is not 15 characters. @#$. "#$@%" is not 15 characters.

Update:
Jack asked for a use case. Here are 3 words currently in use by the FAA, US Army, US Airforce, etc.

The word "Roger" by itself is used in radio communications to indicate receipt of a message. From around 1938 it was the military phonetic for the letter "R" abbreviation for "Received,".

It is common in military communication to communicate that a message has been received and understood.

From the earliest days of wireless communication, the Morse code letter R (dit-dah-dit) has been used to indicate "O.K." or "Understood." So 'Roger' was the logical voice-phone equivalent." Also from “I Hear America Talking” by Stuart Berg Flexner (Von Nostrand Reinhold Co., New York, 1976). “Roger! A code word used by pilots to mean ‘your message received and understood’ in response to radio communications; later it came into general use to mean ‘all right, OK.’ Roger was the radio communications morse code word for the letter R, which in this case represented the word ‘received.’

‘Roger Wilco’ was the reply to ‘Roger’ from the original transmitter of the radio message, meaning ‘I have received your message that you have received my message and am signing off.” Wilco implies "I will comply"

Add to this list, "Over", "Copy", etc

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If you tried writing "Please elaborate" and the system said it was less than 15 characters, you probably should've gone back and checked your spellings ;) – yoda Sep 19 '11 at 6:43
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Nice rant, but we don't want you writing these stupid tiny comments, clogging things up. Expand on your words and you'll have no problem. – Lightness Races in Orbit Sep 19 '11 at 11:31
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? – JNK Sep 19 '11 at 14:44
Has anyone heard of the saying less is more? – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 22 '11 at 4:37
@1.21gigawatts - Regarding your edit, Stack Overflow is not part of any branch of the military. – Jack Maney Oct 27 '11 at 15:58
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closed as exact duplicate by Michael Petrotta, Tim Stone, Robert Harvey Sep 19 '11 at 4:48

This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question. See the FAQ for guidance on how to improve it.

2 Answers

Can I tell you how I feel? Can I state my opinion?

Yes.

The main thing holding me back is this attitude that it's perfect. That it doesn't need to be improved. That no one can add anything better to it. I think it's this attitude that's creating all these frustrations using this site.

I don't know why you think this is the culture here, but we all recognize that SE isn't perfect. That's what this entire feedback site is for, with the and tags.

I would like to write "Thank you" to the people that respond but SO requires you to type 15 characters.

That's what upvoting is for.

I want to type "Ok" or "I understand" but SO requires me to say more. I want to type "YES" to a question but that's not enough text for Stack Overflow. [...] I want to type "No" but it's not 15 characters.

Make it clear what you're responding to. "@username Ok, I get why that works" or "@username Yes, that's what I mean" or "No, this answer is wrong because 1+1 is not 3".

I want to type "Please elaborate" but it's not 15 characters. I want to type "What do you mean?" but it's not 15 characters. I want to type "Explain" but it's not 15 characters.

If someone hasn't been clear, they're probably confused. Help them improve their question. "Can you show me an example database table?" or "What do you mean when you say you want to foo the bar?" is a lot more helpful than "Please elaborate" when someone doesn't know what they need. That's why they're asking the question.

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@tomalak - You said, "Nice rant, but we don't want you writing these stupid tiny comments, clogging things up." This is how I talk normally... your comment is really insulting. To everyone else that gave a normal reply thank you. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 17 '11 at 1:45
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@1.21gigawatts - Why not put your comment in the comment thread for the question (which is where it belongs)? – Jack Maney Oct 17 '11 at 17:19
Yesterday it appeared I could not comment in the main thread. It appears now that I can. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 18 '11 at 23:02
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I don't understand where you're getting the idea that anyone thinks that SO can't be improved--especially the developers.

As for wanting to post comments consisting entirely of "thank you", you can give thanks by upvoting (and, if applicable, accepting an answer). It would probably be more helpful to say something along the lines of "please elaborate; what do you mean by X?" than a simple "please elaborate". And if you want to leave a comment consisting of "no", why not follow it up with why you're saying no?

Detailed communication is not something to be afraid of.

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quote, "As for wanting to post comments consisting entirely of "thank you", you can give thanks by upvoting (and, if applicable, accepting an answer). " Why can't I have the option? I would rather say thank you than a thumbs up – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 17 '11 at 1:44
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It's not that it's not being improved. It's that I'm being forced to do things your way. It's that I'm not given an option. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 17 '11 at 1:47
"And if you want to leave a comment consisting of "no", why not follow it up with why you're saying no?" If another person is asking for a yes or no answer it should be fine to just say yes or no. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 17 '11 at 1:49
Saying "thank you" is redundant when you have the option of up-voting, Stack Overflow isn't a democracy, and so-called "yes or no" questions are almost always better served with an answer that goes a bit beyond "yes" or "no". – Jack Maney Oct 17 '11 at 14:43
It seems like you're saying there is no valid use case for an answer less than 15 characters. Anyway, I'm tired of this. You obviously know better than me... I'm turned off to these sites. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 18 '11 at 22:59
Maybe I want to double down on saying thank you? To me it matters to say it (in this case type it) rather than give a thumbs up. It's more personal in my opinion. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 18 '11 at 23:07
@1.21gigawatts - I honestly can't think of such a use case. Again, detailed communication is nothing to be afraid of. And there's no need to do such "doubling down"; there is no need for redundancy. – Jack Maney Oct 19 '11 at 15:08
I've posted use cases up in the original message. I'd also like to add that there is a question on this page below this comment box asking, "Was this post useful to you?" It allows you to choose "yes" or "no". Tomalak would say these are tiny and stupid responses. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 20 '11 at 12:07
@1.21gigawatts - And other people (including myself) have pointed out that these use cases are insufficient to warrant removal of the minimum length requirement for a comment. And pushing a button is not the same thing as leaving a comment. – Jack Maney Oct 20 '11 at 14:10
Hi Jack, I disagree. I believe that these are valid use cases. The fact that I bring this is up as well as that others have brought this up is evidence that there is a need here for this restriction to be lifted. This is something the community members are asking for and yet you ignore there needs. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 22 '11 at 4:22
Jack, you said pushing a button is not the same thing as leaving a comment. You've just proved my point. You've said yourself, "Saying 'thank you' is redundant when you have the option of up-voting" aka pushing a button. I'm saying exactly the same thing. Pushing thumbs up is not the same as leaving a thank you comment or any other short answer. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 22 '11 at 4:25
And Jack, you've also said, "...Stack Overflow isn't a democracy, and so-called 'yes or no' questions are almost always better served with an answer that goes a bit beyond 'yes' or 'no'." So, you admit there are questions that are better served with a 'yes' or 'no' answer. – 1.21 gigawatts Oct 22 '11 at 4:30
@1.21gigawatts - Again, detailed communication is nothing to be afraid of. You're merely rehashing the same points over and over again. That you don't like the minimum comment length requirement is, again, completely irrelevant since Stack Overflow is not a democracy. – Jack Maney Oct 22 '11 at 18:34
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