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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