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I believe that the numbers at the beginning of a comment is the number of votes on it.

I searched and tried to find it, but I couldn't: how can I vote on a comment? Is there a reputation limit?

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    Yes: you need a reputation of 15 or greater to vote on comments, same as for voting on questions and answers. See here. Aug 22, 2014 at 22:42

2 Answers 2

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Yep, 15 rep is required. After you reach 15 rep (which, believe me, is not really hard) on hovering a comment you'll see an arrow:

enter image description here

Click it.

enter image description here

Yay. Comment upvoted.

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  • Thanks for the image, i got confused because eventhought i cannot vote there is arrows for answers, but nothing related to comments.
    – hece
    Aug 23, 2014 at 5:55
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Welcome to Stack Overflow!

I do not see the badge Informed in your status, which suggests you chose not to take the introductory Tour after signing up. One of its (many) hints for beginners is

As you earn reputation, you'll unlock new privileges like the ability to vote, comment, and even edit other people's posts.

and on the specific topic of commenting:

You can always comment on your own questions and answers. Once you earn 50 reputation, you can comment on anybody's post.

The Help Center > Privileges > comment everywhere contains a description of commenting, but the upvote number itself is mentioned in Help Center > Privileges > Vote Up and is 15, as others helpfully pointed out.

"I searched, tried to find but i couldn't find": For help on using SO's own infrastructure, visit the Help Center (a suitable link is included in aforementioned Tour), which has a Search feature of its own:

https://stackoverflow.com/help

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    Bolding 50 rep requirement to comment doesn't make any sense...
    – nicael
    Aug 22, 2014 at 23:10
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    @nicael: (...) By Jove, you are right! That is for commenting, not voting on comments. So where is the limit for comment-voting described? (NM, brain freeze -- just found it.)
    – Jongware
    Aug 22, 2014 at 23:40

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