I edit a lot of posts every day. I often run across posts with 'Hi' and 'Thanks' on the top and the bottom of the post respectively. I also run across things like:

--User

Should these items be removed during the editing of the post by an editor?

share|improve this question
71  
@Joe It's not the admins, it's the users who work (myself included) to make questions better by editing them. – Sam152 Jul 4 '10 at 8:22
17  
Not really a duplicate at all - the earlier question was about posting etiquette, this is about editing etiquette. – Shog9 Jul 8 '10 at 17:16
4  
@Shog: Okay, subtle difference, but when Jeff says "In general, taglines and signatures are strongly discouraged, and are likely to be edited out" (2nd paragraph in his answer) then I think this topic is covered. – Jon Seigel Jul 8 '10 at 17:19
4  
@Jon: you'd think so, right? And yet, there was enough controversy surrounding the actual practice of editing them out that this question had to be asked anyway... – Shog9 Jul 8 '10 at 17:21
2  
@Shog: See also, Jeff's comment on this answer. IMO, the combination of (a) this content being disallowed/discouraged, and (b) the community being encouraged to improve the content of the site, makes this question almost a non-question. I do see your point, though I'm not sure it really makes a difference. – Jon Seigel Jul 8 '10 at 17:29
6  
@Jon: Eh, it's something to point to when folks whine about it. There have been a couple of questions closed as duplicates of this, and I've actually seen at least one person using the URL as their "revision comment" while performing editing. Ultimately though, it serves the same primary purpose as most of the "etiquette" posts on Meta: get the discussion done with so we don't have to repeat it every week... – Shog9 Jul 8 '10 at 17:35
27  
Whats wrong with hi or thanks? Boy what is this world coming to. Mundane mutes who just want answers. – JonH Jan 25 '12 at 17:13
26  
Kill it with fire. You want to do social you get on Facebook. :) I like the questions just to be questions (without any noise). – PeeHaa 埽 Jan 30 '12 at 19:35
2  
+1 three years passed and this subject continues to be discussed onto new questions everyday! – Zuul Jul 16 '12 at 22:02
@zuul: Why? People can't just read the clear decision here? – GEOCHET Jul 17 '12 at 13:49
I can't speak for ALL the users, but I've just found this question yesterday. Despite the fact I find this answers very useful, doesn't seem appropriate to call it "clear decision" since opinions continue to go both ways. – Zuul Jul 17 '12 at 14:32
2  
Opinions do not go 'either way'. Look at the answers and the votes on them. Just because we have a vocal minority it doesn't override the overwhelming support for the removal of such extraneous clutter from posts. It also does not override the site policy listed below as well. – GEOCHET Jul 17 '12 at 16:27
2  
Just to be clear, I've been editing a lot lately over on SO, and I've become a little worried that I'm being perceived as a serial editor for no point, I've been formatting code and correcting spelling but also I've removed a ton of Thanks, Thx, Please help !!! Cheers etc... Can one reassure me I'm alright with this behaviour otherwise I'll stop doing it, but I do feel like I'm improving the quality. – Daniel Aug 13 '12 at 21:44
2  
There are about 247 votes for answers that are ok with 'thanks being added'! It's NOT a minority of SO users who think being human is fine and doesn't take up much space/time. Go through and add them up yourself. – Luke Stanley Aug 22 '12 at 20:11
1  
I would love to see where you are getting your numbers from. You are clearly counting in a very skewed manner. – GEOCHET Sep 10 '12 at 16:48
show 3 more comments

29 Answers

up vote 413 down vote accepted

I've always been against the greetings and salutations (along with other extraneous clutter) in questions for a number of reasons:

  1. It will leave even less room in the question preview so that we have more difficulty gauging what a question consists of by reading the preview.

  2. It takes time to read and parse through those questions when I am trying to spend my time more efficiently reading through the actual question and figuring out how to appropriately answer it. If I have to start reading all the little side comments and snarky humor inserted in there it detracts from the overall message.

  3. If this is supposed to be a website which is servicing more than just the primary author, we need to think about how we construct messages so that they appear more clearly to those searching on google for questions that match their own. If I am looking for a solution for question X, I want to find someone who had the same problem, not their short autobiography and formalities before getting to that actual question.

share|improve this answer
31  
And here I have to come in with a possible disagreement. These points seem to be valid if the greetings, etc. are sufficiently extensive -- but I fail to see how a simple, three-character "Hi," at the beginning would 1) significantly reduce the room in the question preview, 2) significantly add to the time required to read and parse the question (there's a huge gulf between a three-character greeting and plural "side comments" and "snarky humor"), and 3) be the same as an autobio in terms of both length and distracting potential. – mike4ty4 Sep 11 '12 at 21:14
5  
Yet to justify banning all greetings, the reasoning must be sufficiently good as to be able to persuasively dismiss even the most trivial cases. – mike4ty4 Sep 11 '12 at 21:16
@mike4ty4: I think your exception proves the rule. – Frerich Raabe Nov 21 '12 at 12:36
So the policy is to approve edits which only remove greetings? – jontro Jan 21 at 12:00
19  
I've been losing my Thanks on my posts and was sent here. I completely disagree with the unbridled hunting down and destroying of sweet and innocent niceties from posts. Let's keep the human touch. Let's face it, developers get the bad rap of being nerds, awkward and socially unaware, sitting in their mom's basements coding all day. Let's not lose the one little bit of humanity we have to hold on to. Let's say 'Hi' and 'Thanks', or at least, let's reserve the right for someone who wants to say it can say it without it being ripped out. – David Lozzi Jan 22 at 17:15
7  
@David Lozzi: Totally agree with you. We are humans, a single line giving thanks should not be deleted. – Spekdrum Jan 24 at 15:41
@jontro My policy is to either flag edits that consist solely of that as "Too minor" or improve and fix some other things and uncheck "Suggested edit was helpful". – phant0m May 11 at 13:01
Openings with "hi", "greetings" and similar are for writing letters, you don't often see them used on internet forum posts. So they are unnecessary, a forum post is not a letter. I see no harm with a polite "thank you" at the end though, that's just good manners. If you edit a post to remove a "thank you", it probably just means that you, the editor, have poor manners. Of course remarks like "please reply quick I have a deadline" or "any well-formatted, compilable code is acceptable" are just irrelevant clutter, on the border to rudeness, and should be removed. – Lundin May 14 at 10:02

We now automatically remove salutations from posts as they are entered.

I got really tired of performing this edit over and over, so anything matching the form of …

^                 # begins at start of body
\s*               # possible spaces
(
hii?(?![a-z])|    # any of these greeting words
hello|
h(e|a)y(?![a-z])|
dear|
greetings|
hai|
guys|
howdy|
h(i|e)ya|
hola
)
.*?               # followed by anything, up to...
(
[.,;!-]+          # one or more bits of punctuation
\s*               # possible spaces
|
(\r?\n)+          # one or more newlines
)

… is removed automagically at the time of submission to the server.

The thanks parts at the end of posts are much more difficult / risky to detect, so we are not touching those for now.

Some stats based on a local copy of the Stack Overflow database: questions starting with …

  • hi 300,455
  • hello 107,646
  • hey 22,697
  • dear 3,998
  • greetings 1,978
  • hai 964
  • guys 921
  • hii 512
  • howdy 483
  • hiya 344
  • hay 296
  • heya 207
  • hola 56
  • hihi 6
  • salutations 5

I've also removed most of the salutations (per above) across the network from existing posts.

share|improve this answer
42  
I hope you also inform the user about this at that time, otherwise I'm sure we'll get a lot of confused users here on meta again... – fretje Jun 6 '11 at 9:14
32  
@fretje - I doubt many users who do this will notice, much in the same way they probably don't notice tag synonym silent updates. There's another largish class of users who obviously don't re-read/QA check their new posts after pushing the button who I'd say are the most prolific of the salutation prefixers - I think they'll never cotton on or will care. – Kev Jun 6 '11 at 10:20
39  
So glad to see this. How about torching signatures, too? And perhaps crap like "thanks in advance?" Great, thanks in advance. – Justin Morgan Jun 7 '11 at 14:21
11  
Have you told Jin? (I'm strongly in favor of this filter on main sites, but weakly against on metas. It's completely natural to start “Hi, I'm someone you've never seen before and I'm going to do something important to your site” with a greeting.) – Gilles Jun 7 '11 at 22:00
5  
hiii, may be hii? -> hii* – YOU Jun 9 '11 at 6:49
4  
For the thanks: \n\nThanks(,\s?[a-z]+)?\.?$ Only if the thanks is alone and at the ending of the post... I guess this one might match a good number of legit thanks taglines. It is unlikely for a real post to end with Thanks, Somebody., if it was an input for some code it wouldn't be at the end and it would probably have 4 spaces before or would be wrapped with `. Without testing I can only try to help with some ideas... (if I could only test it on data stackexchange... :P) Is there a way I can use regex over there? – BrunoLM Jun 24 '11 at 1:32
3  
"… Sir", "Sir" "No Sir" seems to be used at the start of posts by some people – Ian Ringrose Jun 29 '11 at 12:14
2  
Add regards to the list. – Chichiray Aug 10 '11 at 15:44
2  
@chi regards is not a salutation; this answer is only about salutations at the top of posts. Comments referencing anything else will be removed. – Jeff Atwood Aug 10 '11 at 21:46
45  
Hopefully no one will create a language called Salutations! in which all the keywords are greetings. It would make for an interesting "Hello world" application... ;) – TrueWill Sep 10 '11 at 19:46
5  
how about "FRIENDS"!!? shouldn't it be removed? – InfantPro'Aravind' Feb 27 '12 at 12:02
8  
Hello world is a program I really can't get to work. I'm getting a... :P – Lego Jul 17 '12 at 14:39
3  
So I can cheat the filter with the German "Hallo"? :) – Hristo Iliev Jul 31 '12 at 10:22
19  
So that's what's breaking my Lolcode-related questions :( – Tom Aug 8 '12 at 15:20
2  
Interesting. Perhaps the on page HTML editor could highlight that regex in red in the preview pane, with a strikethrough and a mouseover that explains the reason that this stuff is getting removed. – Alex C Jan 9 at 15:02
show 17 more comments

Yes. I view this in quite a simplistic way. Let's take your action out of the equation - if we had two parallel worlds, one with the question including the greetings, etc, and one without, which would we choose?

I'd choose the world where the questions just had the required information, as readably and concisely as possible.

Your actions make that world reality, so +1 from me. Admittedly that's treating your time as if it were free - it could be that you could spend the same amount of time on more useful edits, but I'm never sure that flies. The actual act of removing the greeting probably doesn't take much time, and by the time you think "No, I won't bother" you'd already have read the question and thought of doing it anyway.

(If the user then rolls back the edits insisting that they really want the greeting, then I'd suggest leaving it alone, but that's a slightly different matter.)

share|improve this answer
1  
@Jon - I completely agree about the best case scenario which is the world that people don't put it there in the first place. – RSolberg Jul 6 '09 at 21:56
6  
Wow, that's exactly what I say to people who accuse me for things like not saying this stuff all the time. People here spend 90% of their phone calls saying useless stuff. I think these things are created by telecom companies for their own benefit! – Mehrdad Afshari Jul 6 '09 at 22:04
37  
You would choose a universe of emotionless machines? – hasen j Jul 8 '09 at 16:09
86  
@hasenj: I choose a world where strangers try to convey information rather than impersonal greetings (they're not really saying "Hi" to me). I interact with people in person or on chat when I want to exchange pleasantries - questions and answer sites are for information. – Jon Skeet Jul 8 '09 at 16:13
9  
Jon, I wish I had rep high enough to write your 4 paragraphs as 3 and save 2 lines, which amounts to many lines not read in total. – Joe Polski Jun 9 '10 at 18:38
14  
@hasen j - "emotionless machines?" Yes, I'd pick that, since every time the machines develop emotions, they turn into Skynet... – John C Jul 8 '10 at 15:57
3  
Hi Jon, I think you're right. I hate salutations. Best regards. --- Sarcasm --- – Roberto Aloi Jul 22 '11 at 13:16
12  
What bothers me is the desire to have everyone operate identically. Some don't like salutation/thank yous and that's fine. But some of us do. So why should everyone be forced into the exact same approach? Personally I like the fact that people are different. – David Thielen Aug 14 '11 at 0:49
11  
@David: If there's no concrete benefit one way or the other, that's fine. But there is concrete benefit in removing greetings - it makes more of the useful part of the question visible in the snippet on the main page. This isn't some arbitrary attempt at homogeneity - it's for a very good reason. – Jon Skeet Aug 14 '11 at 6:15
12  
Jon - you have a good point about the snippet shown on the main page. But what if you used your auto-stripper not on the post, but on what you pull to show on the main page? With that said, I don't use salutations here because no one else did (I thought that was voluntary not enforced) - but I do close with thank you as I consider not adding that impolite. – David Thielen Aug 14 '11 at 15:08
5  
I agree with @DavidThielen. It makes sense, for technical reasons, to skip the greeting. A "Thanks" at the end, however, conveys both gratitude and humility. When I ask a question, I am well aware that people will take time away from other valuable efforts, professional or private, to answer my question and add value to the community. Even if someone simply takes the time to read my question they have made some effort for which they will never be recompensed. I think that deserves a simple, courteous "Thanks". – Cyborgx37 Aug 24 '12 at 19:04
5  
@Cyborgx37: I still think it's basically white noise in the grand scheme of things. It's fluff which is only distracting. I'd rather questioners expressed their respect by putting more time into asking a good question :) – Jon Skeet Aug 24 '12 at 21:57
6  
@JonSkeet I understand your point of view. And I think it's fine that many choose to not do it. What I disagree with is that this approach is imposed on all. I would never tell you that you must say thanks. But why am I told I can't say thanks? – David Thielen Aug 26 '12 at 20:38
1  
@MehrdadAfshari I think SO and phone calls (or face to face) are quite different, it's sounds a lot more rude on the phone if you don't properly greet someone. Don't be a computer – Juan Mendes Oct 5 '12 at 20:20
2  
@SomaMan: It's fine for you to decide not to use your time that way - but I would still rather see the post without the "thanks" than with it, so if someone has to choose between (say) performing that edit or watching some TV adverts, I'm absolutely fine for them to make the edit. – Jon Skeet Oct 25 '12 at 9:44
show 3 more comments

I personally do not think that salutations and taglines alone justify an edit for them to be removed from a post. If the question or answer has other reasons to justify an edit, sure go ahead and clean them up while your in there. But as a general rule of thumb for me, I don't think its a big enough deal to justify an edit.

EDIT
I completely agree with Jon's answer in terms of the perfect world where the question is just the question with no clutter (salutations and taglines). So in the ideal world, they are not there to begin with. But if they are there, I still probably wouldn't edit them just to remove the clutter.

share|improve this answer
24  
there are nearly always other things to edit in questions that contain salutations. If i see a hello my dear friends I just start editing and read the rest of the question in the edit mode and fix all the other stuff that is found in there most of the time. – Janusz Jun 10 '10 at 7:59
2  
I think they should always be removed because I view this site as a long-term reference rather than a forum. It helps all of us when we clean out the cruft, even if it's a small edit to remove small parts that contribute nothing to the understanding of the question. Not performing this cleanup because you feel the edit is to small is counter-productive. – Starfish Oct 1 '12 at 19:13
Your perfect world is probably right to the Heaven door. – shani Apr 8 at 6:18

Usually salutations don't take up enough space to make a huge difference in the preview lines and taglines take up none at all unless the question is really short.

So, if the post has nothing else wrong with it and is just bookended with "Hi/Thanks", then you can probably pass on the edit. There are posts which need attention much more than these.

Also, cutting other filler-ish lines and rearranging sentences to make the edit seem larger so you can justify taking out salutations/taglines seems a bit childish. I've seen it in a few cases and would not like it to become the norm.


I think it boils down to the semi-personal nature of the site itself. It's half technical paper and half discussion. We aren't robots and we aren't speaking to robots. Some people just want acknowledgment of that fact.

share|improve this answer
14  
+1 AFFIRMATIVE. – Earwicker Jul 6 '09 at 22:27
4  
+1 overall, but I do think leading salutations should be culled. – Software Monkey Jul 7 '09 at 2:33
3  
I disagree on leading salutations, but the bigger issue is that I believe any edit which is a positive one, regardless of how small, is a good thing. Since I think eradicating salutations is a positive, I don't mind when people simply edit to delete "Hi". – Hilarious Comedy Pesto Jul 7 '09 at 18:06
"There are posts which need attention much more than these." But I've already read it, and it takes 4 seconds to remove them. Who are you to dictate that I should spend my 4 seconds doing something else? – Lightness Races in Orbit Feb 25 '12 at 19:03
2  
I agree in that, when somebody IS trying to act a little more human, then editing out their little human bit of emotion ends up feeling to them like a slap in the face, vs. a correction. Which means that you end up with ridiculousness like: stackoverflow.com/questions/6626227/… ... which to me seems like a big waste of time. Since this site is not a technical manual...people are inevitably going to post casual language. "Correcting" that involved a much difference response than simply fixing grammar, or rephrasing for better clarity. – johnnietheblack May 7 '12 at 19:22

If the author of a question uses a salutation and/or ends with a "Thanks" in his question because he/she is trying to be nice/respectful to others that might be answering his/her question, I see absolutely no problem with that. And, in fact, sometimes I find it kind of refreshing.

I can at least see the argument (although I strongly don't agree) for someone removing the salutations if he/she is editing the question for technical correctness or other things in order to make the question more concise. However, I absolutely think it is bush league with no legitimate justification to just edit an author's post to solely remove salutations and that is all.

If StackOverflow, Meta, etc. want to ban the use of salutations, thank you's, etc. then do so explicitly. It is not like there are not other rules for these forums. You can make a rule via a dictatorship or via a democratic process... I don't care.

But, as evidenced in this thread, there is clearly a split about whether or not salutations or the like are ok in questions (maybe a majority leaning towards no).

To me this is all about common sense. It takes literally zero time to read a "Hi" or a "Thank You", and to me, the personal benefits of seeing those words if someone chooses to use them outweighs what I consider a weirdly rigid regiment of question asking by some.

I actually find this whole conversation a bit disturbing. I for one am not going to teach my kids that is wrong to say "Hi" or "Thank You", even in electronic form, even for "fear" of being downvoted, edited or deleted.

I guess for now, until such a hard and fast rule is in place regarding this issue, I will probably mix using salutations and not using them. If I do, I will feel no shame about it and I suppose I cannot stop someone from taking them out; I guess I will just have to determine whether or not it is worth it for me to put them back in.

share|improve this answer
1  
You are not the first. This has been a brewing subject which erupted months ago before. – TheTXI Jul 7 '09 at 1:40
@TheTXI, I am sure, but I think it was a discussion between me and another Meta member in that thread I mentioned that led him to ask this particular question here today. – Joel Marcey Jul 7 '09 at 1:52
6  
why would people "fear" being edited? Edits to your question are a good thing - they're trying to help you get better answers. Downvotes and deletions are another thing, but I don't think anyone is asking for that. – André Paramés Jan 13 '11 at 13:34
6  
@And Removing a thanks never gets the OP a better answer. – Bastardo Aug 1 '11 at 10:34
9  
thank you - for your support of thank you :) – David Thielen Aug 14 '11 at 0:46
5  
It takes literally zero time to read a "Hi" or a "Thank You" Look up the meaning of "literally" and "zero" in your favourite English dictionary. – Lightness Races in Orbit Feb 25 '12 at 19:04
1  
@RoboLover: SO is not just for the benefit of some single OP. It's for everybody. Certainly I'm not here giving my time to help clean up the messy questions just so some kid in Arizona gets the solution to his problem (that he just didn't bother researching in the first place) – Lightness Races in Orbit Feb 25 '12 at 19:04
@LightnessRacesinOrbit you are just a robot. – Bastardo Feb 26 '12 at 12:17
@RoboLover: Nice. I hope your family is well, and that you are blessed with sunny skies; best regards and salutions, yours always, – Lightness Races in Orbit Feb 26 '12 at 12:54
@LightnessRacesinOrbit same to you my friend. – Bastardo Feb 26 '12 at 21:55
1  
I completely agree with this position. I'm one of those crazy people who likes to give small tokens of respect and appreciation to people I'm asking a favour of, and to receive them in the reverse situation. – j_random_hacker Nov 21 '12 at 18:04
1  
I agree that the time it takes to read a simple 'hi' or 'thank you' is unmeasurable by most humans. Granted, extensive BS that does nothing to improve the question or answer should be culled. I can even agree to culling opening greetings, but when someone says 'thank you' to another user who has answered their question, that is simple good manners. I have tried to thank everyone who has helped me in the time I've been here, and if someone has edited those out for no other reason that to "improve their stats", which is really what this all boils down to -- well, they have my pity. – Deina Underhill Apr 7 at 22:55

Absolutely not! I have to agree with toast - there's no reason we can't be a bit more informal and attempt to interact with the community on a more human level. If this is how the majority of programmers interact with their peers (no greetings, all information), then I'm really glad I don't have to deal with that every day.

share|improve this answer
65  
Hi, Andy. It is my hope that this message finds you in good health and better cheer! I'm waiting out a rainstorm here, the sort of fast and heavy summer rains common to the southern parts of Colorado - you may be familiar with them. But enough of these matters: I write to you today for a singular purpose, that of expressing my disagreement with your reasoning in the above answer. While I can certainly appreciate the desire for familiarity among peers on SO, ultimately I feel it serves only to distract casual readers from the intended message. Please give my best to your family; sincerely, Shog – Shog9 Jul 6 '09 at 22:40
8  
Shog, I respectully disagree with your disagreement, but love the effort you made. – Antony Jul 6 '09 at 23:12
3  
What I find funny is that your answer says you agree with me, but you have more upvotes than I do. Apparently agreeing with me is better than being me. :D – toast Jul 6 '09 at 23:24
24  
Dearest Shog9, Thanks! I really appreciate the time and effort that went in to your response. I can tell that you put some thought into what you were saying and took the time to make the spirit of your answer clear so as not to unintentionally offend me. Thank-you also for the well-wishes; they are happily received. – ajm Jul 6 '09 at 23:30
@toast: I wrote my answer and only afterwards did I see your 'speaking to robots' comment - nonetheless, I'm glad someone out there agrees! – ajm Jul 6 '09 at 23:32
1  
I just thought it was funny the way it voted out. People are strange creatures. – toast Jul 6 '09 at 23:39
3  
But SO questions are not about interacting with your peers. They are questions. This site is a knowledge resource, not a chat. – Lightness Races in Orbit Jul 27 '11 at 20:41
@toast: "agreeing with you" is also a constraint more easily met by members of the general public, than "being you". Which is the reason I think it is favoured :) – sehe Aug 22 '11 at 21:19

I'm now against salutations at the start of a question or answer because it clutters the preview on the front page question list, but don't see the harm in a 'Thanks in advance' or 'Thanks for looking' at the end. We can't live lives of total formality.

Update:

Having seen the light and having been a mod for a bit, these things have become offensive to the eye now :)

I think SO posts look so much cleaner without salutations and sigs/tags than the posts on some of my pre-Stack Overflow haunts.

share|improve this answer
1  
they're not as bad, for sure -- stuff at the top hurts more -- but still not necessary. – Jeff Atwood Jun 6 '11 at 9:39
3  
@jeff - TBH if I'm editing a post into shape I remove the end of post tag lines as well now. I still feel a bit icky about just editing a post to remove a simple "Thanks" though, it feels a bit overbearing somehow. That said, I'd be happier if they weren't there too. – Kev Jun 6 '11 at 10:05
My guilty pleasure - I never right at the top as I know it annoys people, but I sometimes slip in a thanks / similar phrased item as it just seems polite.... if it gets deleted or whatever, I have no complaints though. – William Hilsum Jun 6 '11 at 10:37
3  
We can't live lives of total formality Yet that's exactly what automatically writing a posh greeting at the bottom of a message is. It's meaningless other than being a formality. – Lightness Races in Orbit Dec 23 '11 at 13:54
You are assuming it is not a sincere sentiment, that is just that - an assumption. – Luke Stanley Aug 22 '12 at 20:02

Flogging a dead donkey here, but anyway...

For the die-hard thankers, I have a question:

Who are you saying thank you to, and what are you saying thank your for?

  • Thank you for having read this far?

  • Thank you for the answer which you may-or-may not decide to post and which may-or-may not be useful, and which I may actually end up down-voting or even flagging?

I can fully understand and support comments saying thank you on helpful answers, but pre-emptive thank-yous on questions is just... nonsensical.

To all those who say we are unfeeling robots - "Please" IS allowed, and makes sense (that's my stance, in any case).

Another remark - it seems to me that a deeper issue in a lot of reactions here isn't so much about Hi and thanks, but "who has dared to edit my question?!" People need to drop that sense of personal ownership.

Your question, and the answers, 'belong' to the community, and are there for everyone.


All that said, I think we're fighting a losing battle...

share|improve this answer
I think this needs to be stated in the FAQ. – John Saunders Sep 17 '10 at 15:02
8  
I say thank you to be polite that someone took the time to read my question. – David Thielen Aug 14 '11 at 0:51
The politenes is senseless at all as you take it. For other people it is not. We are different. But you can't recognize it, just because being polite is senseless to you. – Gangnus Feb 8 '12 at 8:35
1  
@DavidThielen By doing this, you are increasing the amount of time it takes to read the question. It's all fine and dandy to be a well mannered person, but civilities that inconvenience others are no civilities at all. – Asad Mar 1 at 19:16
@Asad Does this mean we all must write in the way you prefer? What about those who prefer a thank you at the end? Is your inconvenience reading two whole additional words more important? – David Thielen Mar 4 at 18:31
2  
@DavidThielen No, we must all write in the way most people prefer. See the top answer. Those people who expect a thank you at the end are here for the wrong reason. The point of answering questions on SO isn't to accumulate the gratitude of anonymous internet users, it is to make SO a better repository of knowledge for those who visit it in the future. – Asad Mar 4 at 18:32
@Asad I'll agree that this should go the way the majority prefers. However the answer above is one person's opinion. I've yet to see this put to a vote of the users here. I'm guessing if it was put to a vote a majority would be fine with allowing a thank you. Since we agree, how about allowing both ways until we do get a measure of what most people prefer? – David Thielen Mar 5 at 14:22

Personally, I have been pretty active lately removing email like salutations and sigs. I think it just adds noise, and distracts from the content, both for questions and answers.

I find sigs particularly annoying, imagine a world where you double sign your emails.

Eg:

Dear Murray,

Time for a band meeting

Cheers
Brett 
                                 Brett

It looks kind of silly

share|improve this answer
And now you've signed this post 4 times. Shame on you. – random Aug 27 '09 at 14:39
@random removed 2 of them – Sam Saffron Aug 27 '09 at 21:49
You should have signed it with Jermaine instead of Brett two times. Why does Brett always get to sign it two times? – Reno Jun 6 '11 at 9:36
1  
+1 for FOTC reference :) – Alex Coplan Dec 15 '11 at 1:34

I avoid salutations and the like, however, I like to thank those who attempt to help me with a question. I keep those to comments only. I keep the questions and answers themselves impersonal, informational and professional.

I feel this strikes a good balance and I've hoped that other Stackers aren't bothered by it.

share|improve this answer
2  
I love your balance. Rock on! – Lightness Races in Orbit Jan 6 '12 at 19:38

We are people, not machines.

I personally don't start questions with a "Hi", but I usually end them with "Thanks".

Bottom line: don't remove greetings/thanks taglines.

share|improve this answer
Then why didn't you write the proper salutations and regards in your post here? Am I a machine, hasen? I mean ... you didn't even say "please"! – Lightness Races in Orbit Jul 27 '11 at 20:42
@Tomalak: it wasn't a question, thank you very much :) – sehe Aug 22 '11 at 21:20
1  
@sehe: Politeness only required in questions? OK, copy that. :) – Lightness Races in Orbit Aug 22 '11 at 22:22
(BTW, bottom line: I'm still going to remove them... with extreme prejudice at that.) – Lightness Races in Orbit Aug 22 '11 at 22:23
2  
@LightnessRacesinOrbit I kinda think you are a big bummer. While I can understand many of the answers on this page...you seem to be just about everywhere gettin snooty. Really, we could go in circles with everything, but in the end the real question is: "How much should I chill out when things aren't the way I like it?". I wouldn't (and haven't) flipped out when someone edited something like that out...but if I knew that they were sitting somewhere twisting their metaphorical mustache and laughing maniacally as they did it, I'd probably feel like I was being censored. – johnnietheblack May 7 '12 at 19:28
@LightnessRacesinOrbit "with extreme prejudice at that" This highlights whats wrong with your argument. Given "SO is neither a message board nor a forum; it is a knowledge resource", it appears there is no room for prejudice, extreme or otherwise. In fact, lets take the concept even further - custom usernames are unnecessary fluff, lets just stick to unique identifiers. I wonder how you would feel about being stripped of your custom username. – user1207217 Oct 19 '12 at 16:08
@user1207217: Let's not take the concept further, because that changes what we're talking about. Just because I don't think people should commute three times a week in a private jet doesn't mean I won't take a plane to the south of Spain once a year – Lightness Races in Orbit Oct 19 '12 at 21:01
@user1207217: Also, "with extreme prejudice" is a turn of phrase. It's not the basis of any argument. – Lightness Races in Orbit Oct 19 '12 at 21:02
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Of course, as I expected, you completely failed to address the point I made, which is that you only support de-fluffing to the extent that it suits you. It is useless fluff, let's not indulge it. Did I note your turn of phrase as being a basis for an argument, or a highlight of what is wrong? Your disposition; heavily biased, unwilling to consider other's viewpoints, must bash all opposing viewpoints. – user1207217 Oct 22 '12 at 14:01
"with extreme prejudice at that" This highlights whats wrong with your argument. / Did I note your turn of phrase as being a basis for an argument, or a highlight of what is wrong So clearly, yes, you did. And just because I feel strongly about my viewpoint doesn't mean I am unable or unwilling to hear other viewpoints, else I would not be participating in this discussion. Quite on the contrary - I simply haven't yet heard an opposing viewpoint that has swayed me. By all means continue to try, but I will not apologise for being "biased" by my own viewpoint... – Lightness Races in Orbit Oct 22 '12 at 15:32

As a software developer with an interest in database integrity and general order, it's offensive to me when a field entitled "question" contains arbitrary conversational fluff. "Thank you" is not a question.

It's like on Facebook when people see, say, the ICQ # profile field and instead of writing their ICQ number like 123456, write (123456 (but I don't really use it any more!!1)) and of course then the software tries to convert that field to a link icq:123456+(but+I+don't+really+use+it+any+more!!1 for display. The conversational fluff could be automatically filtered, sure, but it shouldn't have to be: the ICQ # field is for an ICQ number and nothing else.

On top of the practical reasons given by others, for me this is enough.

SO is neither a message board nor a forum; it is a knowledge resource. Thanks and greetings are simply inappropriate.

share|improve this answer

Wow. Is this a question or a statement? "No" answers don't really seem welcome here.

Either way, I think I understand the point of the question, but the whole tone seems snarky. If someone starts with "Hi" and ends with "Thanks" they aren't being fluffy and it isn't that cumbersome. They're just nice folks. Editing Hi/Thanks sounds rude to me.

As an example, a current question on Stack Overflow is Allocating Memory for NSString:

Hi, I am new to objective-c and a little curious about how I should be managing the memory for the local NSString variables shown below and the associated instance variables inside the class object. The code I have works fine, but just curious as to best practice.

[code snipped out]

Cheers gary

Is "Hi, " really that hard to read? The preview went up to "instance variables inside..." Removing "Hi, " would add "the" to the preview. Would that really help? I don't know gary but removing the "Hi" and possibly "Cheers gary" would buy a tiny bit of space but be like smacking him after he's contributed to the effort. Rude.

Chopping the question down to "How should I be managing..." makes more sense, but it still seems rude to edit gary out of gary's question.

From the faq: Be nice. Treat others with the same respect you'd want them to treat you.


On the other hand, cleaning up or removing txt msg gibberish is a readability improvement and I'd even go so far as to request a "stupid" warning to go along with the duplicate warning when a question is being written.

Another is more grating: Plz validate my validation expression :). The question itself is fine, but the title is annoying and impedes reading. There's a comment asking that he/she not use "Plz", but the title remains.

share|improve this answer
2  
Quoting the FAQ to try and defend this stance is especially funny since the person who wrote the FAQ is also against this nonsense. – GEOCHET Nov 3 '09 at 14:51
3  
Personally, I don't think the "Hi" is such a problem with that example. The "Hi, I am new to objective-c and a little curious about", on the other hand, is useless fluff. – André Paramés Jan 13 '11 at 13:39
2  
I don't see how writing "Hi" or "Thanks" is treating me with respect. If anything, it's offensive that you're pretending you know I even exist. – Lightness Races in Orbit Jul 27 '11 at 20:43

Yes. These should be removed for multiple reasons.

  • Any fluff on the top of the post ends up consuming space in the preview on the questions list.
  • The username is displayed with the avatar directly below the post.
  • 'Thanks' or 'plz help me' or any other closing statement is just useless and detracts from the content of the post.


It should be noted that currently, we have been asked to not edit the post for these reasons alone.

http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/03/the-great-edit-wars/#comment-15830

But these posts typically have multiple other reasons to edit anyway so this is almost never a problem.

share|improve this answer
5  
I agree, however I only edit the post if I'm also making other changes (fixing spelling, grammar, etc). – Thomas Owens Jul 6 '09 at 21:57
4  
i agree totally, and i strongly disagree with what jeff said about small edits in the blog post you linked to. small edits improve the site. it is a flaw in the system that users lose the ability to gain rep after 6 edits. i don't think i should change my behavior (which improves the site) to accommodate a design flaw. but that's just my opinion... – Kip Jul 7 '09 at 1:53
1  
Hey, Rich B linked to Jeff Atwood quoting me! I'M FAMOUS!!! – mmyers Jul 7 '09 at 2:29
5  
"But these posts typically have multiple other reasons to edit anyway so this is almost never a problem." -- that is the key takeaway. – Jeff Atwood Jul 7 '09 at 3:37
2  
How does this sounds: "...That happened to me once. I read this question that was about 40 line long, and I thought I had the answer on the tip of my tongue. I was about to type the answer to be the fastest gun ... but then I saw the last line: "Thanks" .. oh my god, that was so distracting!. When I finally reach the input box, I forgot what the answer was.. I even forgot what the question was... Please remove the Hi/Thank they distract me". It sounds bad to me. – OscarRyz Aug 27 '09 at 1:28
@Oscar: "How does this sounds", it sounds like someone needs to spend more time in their E@SL classes. – GEOCHET Aug 27 '09 at 11:54
1  
@Richb : :) :) Yeap, or that "someone" ( me ) should have taken classes im first place and not learn it ( the language ) empirically as I do ( did ) :P . Too sad comments can't be edited. I really like when you edit my posts and appreciate it, except of course when you just remove "Hi" and "Thanks" ( or change substantially the original question which happens seldom [ or seldom happens? Or happens seldomly :-? ] ) – OscarRyz Aug 28 '09 at 1:05

Since I am not a robot, I enjoy being greeted and thanked, as is the custom in human societies. It also provides a tiny opportunity to express myself, which I relish. Chastising people for using common courtesy is when you know your website (and personality) has jumped the shark.

The effort to "purify" StackOverflow will eventually lead to its undoing. Imagine how easy it will be to be a nuisance when all you have to do to make trouble is say "Hello"!

EDIT: I'd also like to add that this will create chaos, as every single new user will ask every single time why their salutation/greetings keep getting deleted. Then they'll be flooded with links to this question by the nerd patrol. A full 5-10% of all SO content will be about the salutations/greetings. Why? Because it is completely normal and natural in human communication to use these constructs, so it's intuitive that they should appear when you type them.

share|improve this answer
1  
It doesn't make trouble. We just edit it out. – GEOCHET Aug 26 '09 at 22:31
1  
Same thing for your assertion of impending doom. We edits this fluff out now, and we have had minimal problems with people complaining. – GEOCHET Aug 26 '09 at 22:31
12  
"Chastising people for using common courtesy" this is a misconception that many people seem to have. Edits are not reprimands! They're people trying to help you and the community, by writing better answers. You can disagree that removing greetings makes for better answers, but regarding such edits as personal attacks is misguided. – André Paramés Jan 13 '11 at 13:43
6  
Being greeted and thanked is the custom in human conversation, but SO questions are not conversations. Do you see pleasantries in a dictionary? In an encyclopedia? No. – Lightness Races in Orbit Jul 27 '11 at 20:45
@André Paramés: it really doesn't matter if it's a misconception. If many people have it, then it's a true thing to say about community feelings.@GEOCHET – Chris McCall Jul 28 '11 at 20:39
1  
@GEOCHET, it only takes me 2 clicks to rollback the changes. – user156914 Jul 30 '11 at 13:45

"Hi" is useless, as I can't really utter it back, nor can I ask "what's going on?", etc., which would similarly be out of place. It should be edited out as if you were reformatting code - if you are already working there, take it out, otherwise leave it be.

"Thanks" on the other hand, is acceptable, as it expresses gratitude for time spent on my issues, for considering me and trying to help me fix my problem.

share|improve this answer

I tend to do a lot of communication throughout the day, whether it's phone calls, emails, or in-person appointments. Obviously, there's lots of "Good afternoons" and "buh-byes" in all that. Plus, I grew up on dial-up BBS's and Usenet, where those were equally common.

To me, the whole notion of not having a salutation or greeting is just weird, foreign, and borderline rude. Editing out someone's attempt at being polite is even more absurd.

This is not Wikipedia, where there is only one true answer for a particular topic or question. There are a lot of people who make the site happen, and taking away their attempts at personalizing the site and their responses seem just seems pedantic.

share|improve this answer
13  
"This is not Wikipedia" - it's not USENET or a BBS either. The site signs your name for you, and greetings take up valuable screen real estate. – Shog9 Aug 27 '09 at 2:06
21  
signatures and salutations are just noise here, and will be removed. – Jeff Atwood Aug 27 '09 at 2:24
7  
... but... but... it's friendly and polite noise! Point taken. Besides, I think removing superflous crap is well worth making the author look better by fixing spleling errors. – Alex Papadimoulis Aug 27 '09 at 3:00
4  
@Alex: There's nothing polite about it. What meaning does "hi" or "thanks" hold when you don't even know that I exist? Pretending to be personal when in fact you are broadcasting to unknown masses is offensive. – Lightness Races in Orbit Jul 27 '11 at 20:44
2  
@Jeff Atwood: I will rollback the changes as I always do if you remove my greetings or thanks (I know you can delete my account). – user156914 Jul 30 '11 at 13:32
2  
@caveman a single "thanks." in questions is not that big a deal. – Jeff Atwood Jul 30 '11 at 19:07

I'm fine with salutations and thanks, provided they're not too wordy.

share|improve this answer

I agree that salutations and signatures are a waste of screen real estate, and I edit them out generally as a rule.

I personally find reading "thanks/really appreciate/etc" to be insulting when it comes from users with an accept rate of less than 75%. If the user has less than 20 questions logged, I understand - but the ones with 100+ I have a hard time believing.

share|improve this answer

I would just like to add a big LOL at having noticed today that Alf, long berated at least by myself for stubbornly refusing to stop writing "Cheers and hth" at the end of all of his answers and comments, has changed his name to incorporate it.

This is a prime example of writing pleasantries as boilerplate, rather than through any conscious politeness. Along with knee-jerk "thanks" at the end of questions, it's actually offensive that you think this is being polite to me. Might as well incorporate "thanks" in the SO site template so that you don't even have to write it at all.

share|improve this answer
3  
Yeah, I thought that was pretty clever ;-) – Shog9 Mar 4 '12 at 18:38
@Shog9: I think it's just obnoxious! Rather than heeding repeated edits and complaints, he's put up a forcefield around his stubbornness >.< I almost wish I were a thanksrobot so that I could have thought of it first – Lightness Races in Orbit Mar 4 '12 at 18:40
3  
I was with you right until you said that it was offensive to be polite. Whether it's thoughtful or not, it's still politeness. Being offended by that is a personal choice. They are not communicating something that is inherently offensive; you're looking at their pleasantries and deciding that they offend your sensibilities. So I have little sympathy for someone who takes offense at someone's innocent commentary and eccentricities. – Nicol Bolas Mar 5 '12 at 5:05
So I have little sympathy for someone who takes offense at someone's innocent commentary and eccentricities. Seriously...attitudes like this bring me down. – johnnietheblack May 7 '12 at 19:32

Let me start by saying that I find salutations, sigs, etc. extremely annoying. They set my teeth on edge and tend to colour my view of the post they enclose.

Having said that, I do not believe there is any justification for editing Stack Overflow answers (note answers, not questions) that contain these entities. Correct spelling (I'm always grateful for that), but leave it at that. Unlike a question, an answer is an expression of personal belief, knowledge and attitude, and should not be messed with.

share|improve this answer
I notice much fewer salutations in answers than questions however. – toast Jul 6 '09 at 22:08
There is one guy ... but no names, no pack drill! – nb69307 Jul 6 '09 at 22:13
1  
'questiom' - I'd fix it if I could :) – ajm Jul 6 '09 at 22:14
2  
Hi, I'm Daniel. I've noticed few people do this in their comments, what do you guys think? Okay, peace out xxx Daniel – Earwicker Jul 6 '09 at 22:15

Well, I'm guilty (if guilty is the right word) of putting a 'Thanks', or a 'Thanks for any help' line to sign off on a question in some cases.

I have no problem if it gets edited out by somebody though. Now that I have seen this thread, I will be more conscious of not doing it.

I do know about the 'No tag line / signature' thing, and I agree with that. I guess I didn't consider that a 'Thanks' was a tag line.

It has just been something I never gave any thought to, much like signing off an email 'Regards', etc. I just viewed it as a bit of courtesy. After all, I am asking for some help.

share|improve this answer
10  
no, you're not asking a person for help. You're asking a community. What may seem polite when speaking person to person may very well be excessive in this case. As I sometimes put it, these are Q&A sites - we're not having a nice conversation. – John Saunders Aug 6 '10 at 1:44
@John : Agreed, that's a fair point. – Andy Aug 6 '10 at 15:33

In posts on blog comments, blog posts, messageboards, and the like I very rarely start with a salutation, unless I'm addressing only one person. I do, though, always always end with a signature. My posts end with TRiG followed by, if the board supports it, a smiley.

Except on the StackExchange sites, where I just don't do that. I'm not entirely sure why not: it just felt wrong here. On English Language and Usage, where I'm a bit more chatty, I sometimes have to remind myself to omit the signature.

I'm going to sign this post, though.

TRiG.

share|improve this answer
Also, stackoverflow.com/faq#signatures – XTL May 8 '12 at 7:39
@PopularDemand. I deleted that comment now. I'm absolutely certain I remember Jeff Atwood saying that signatures should be removed only when other editing is also being done (and that's the standard I hold to myself), but I can't find it now. Perhaps I'm mixing it up with something he said about editing out "thanks". Or perhaps he changed his mind. shrug – TRiG Sep 10 '12 at 17:30
Actually, you deleted that comment before I even finished writing my comment, so when I submitted mine, I looked like a crazy person responding to nothing. As such, I deleted my comment right after I posted it. I'm surprised you even got notified of it. – Popular Demand Sep 10 '12 at 18:55
@PopularDemand. Not only did I get notified of it, I got to read it. The full thing, here, not just the extract in the global inbox. I was being fast, obviously. – TRiG Sep 10 '12 at 19:39
Wow. Way to be on top of your Stack Exchange activity, sir. I remember seeing something like that too, though I'm not sure it was said by Jeff (and he's retired anyways, so...). I guess I'll post an abbreviated version of my original comment now that we're talking about it again: "it may be wrong to edit just to remove a sig, but rolling such an edit back is unquestionably worse (except possibly here where it's being done jokingly)" – Popular Demand Sep 10 '12 at 19:53
@PopularDemand. I'm not usually a fast responder. I just happened to see it at the right time. – TRiG Sep 10 '12 at 20:09
1  

The signature is fine. Please don't edit the question if that's the only thing you are going to 'clarify' - see Jeff's post on The Great Edit Wars for his suggestion on what to do when the author clearly prefers one representation of the question above the others.

In that post, Jeff says:

"But I would draw the line at editing solely to remove salutations, unless they’re unusually excessive." (Source)

share|improve this answer
8  
Since when did somebody's name form an integral part of a post that isn't already served by the avatar block bottom right of every non-wiki post? – random Nov 3 '09 at 3:25
Conversely, on the other side of the edit wars coin, if someone removes my signature I don't edit the question and answer just to put it back in. – Adam Davis Nov 3 '09 at 3:26
Since every post has the opportunity to become wiki, and I'm not notified when that occurs, I simply tag every post assuming that eventually, through eons of time, everything will become wiki. – Adam Davis Nov 3 '09 at 3:27
1  
@George - thanks for the awesome edit! You've clarified my answer significantly. – Adam Davis Nov 3 '09 at 3:34
5  
@adam: you already have a signature, bottom right of your answer. No need to repeat it. – perbert Nov 3 '09 at 3:55
I have the majority of my reasoning in more detail here: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/5029/… – Adam Davis Nov 3 '09 at 4:02
1  
You shouldn't be putting the signature and tagline in to begin with either. Since you are obviously aware of this, please stop this behavior in the future. – GEOCHET Nov 3 '09 at 14:40
1  
And yet, thus far, no one has given me a reason why I should stop that outweighs my reasons for doing so. It's not an issue of awareness. Either I don't fully understand your arguments, or you don't fully understand mine. Alternately it's subjective, and we each simply lie on two different sides of the line, and can only agree to disagree. – Adam Davis Nov 3 '09 at 15:10
1  
I've seen posts where Jeff has completely contradicted his own quote, i.e. just removed a "Hi" from the first line of a question. – Alex Angas Feb 10 '10 at 22:39
2  
@Pollyanna: if it's a community wiki, it's not your Question or Answer anymore. Why sign it? – André Paramés Jan 13 '11 at 13:47
If we're going to start doing everything that Jeff tells us to, then we're really in trouble. Have you seen how many overwhelmingly popular feature requests have been summarily declined without comment? – Lightness Races in Orbit Aug 22 '11 at 22:30
@Tomalak Meh. Pick and choose your battles. – Adam Davis Aug 23 '11 at 2:19
@Adam: Where's the fun in that? :) – Lightness Races in Orbit Aug 23 '11 at 8:10

In my mind, a Hi at the beginning of the post might not be a good thing, but isn't the end of the world. But if a user starts out their post with something like:

Hey, this is my first time posting at Stack Exchange, so here goes...

I'll likely edit that line out entirely.

A thanks at the bottom should always be allowed as well.

share|improve this answer
4  
The consensus appears to be against you. Certainly, I'll continue removing, "Hi", "Thanks", "Any help?", etc. – John Saunders Mar 9 '11 at 19:21
5  
Even a simple "Hi" is a waste of space, especially in the tooltip where newlines are preserved and that single word taks two lines. – Arjan Apr 5 '11 at 7:26
1  
If a thanks at the bottom should always be allowed, why don't we include it automatically at the end of questions, in the site's template? Then you wouldn't have to bother writing it, and you've still put just as much heart and thought into personally displaying gratitude as you would have otherwise. – Lightness Races in Orbit Aug 22 '11 at 22:28

I know this was posted long ago, but I was pointed to this discussion today by someone on SO. I included the words "Thank you so much in advance" at the very end of my question post. About 5 minutes later I noticed it was edited and (along with changes to the title and the tags) my "thank you" at the bottom was removed. I rolled back the edit and told the person I didn't know why he would remove a "thank you" since I was just trying to be polite. And he said that SO was "not a discussion site, but a Q&A." I responded with the following post:

Wasn't aware "Thank you so much in advance" caused so much "clutter" in the question. Personally, when I read these answers on here, or on other sites yes, I'm looking for answer y to my question x, but I don't think the polite "please" and "thank you" detract from that question and/or answer. I was raised to have good manners and I respect those who exhibit those manners, even when it comes to black and white Q&A sites like SO. Now you're probably going to flag this post or call me out for this comment being a "discussion" not a strict "Q&A" but I felt this needed to be said.

Personally, just like the above post states, I feel like a simple greeting or a "thank you" at the end doesn't detract from the answer/question at all, nor does it add "clutter." I haven't read each of the posts here on this page, but I like how one person said they feel "refreshed" to see polite manners exhibited. I feel the same way. If I'm reading a post and the person gives an answer and says something like "hope this helps" or something to that effect at the end, it gives me the feeling that they actually care if I get the right answer. If I, on the other hand, read a post and it gives me an answer and that's it, just a blunt, quick answer, it can sometimes come off as snobby.

I don't mean to be judgmental, by any means. Each individual has a "tone" when they speak. This tone even comes out when someone writes, types, etc., any form of communication, believe it or not, your tone comes out.

I know I'm beginning to ramble a bit, but in conclusion, I believe when someone exhibits polite manners in their posts, in their talk, whatever form of communication they may be using, that, to me, gives off a positive tone. And if I were given the option of reading two posts, where both posts contained the same info, except one used these manners mentioned above, I'd prefer to read the post that exhibits a positive attitude, the post that says its "pleases" and "thank yous", the post where I feel the person is actually putting effort into helping me out (which is what SO is for)--I'd prefer that post over the other any day.

Some people have taken this argument too far and are being sarcastic about what we mean. I'm not saying that I support the idea of saying "Hey my name is X and I have 3 children and wouldn't you know it little Billy got into the dog food again today" and then go on with the question--that's ridiculous.

Plain and simple: I don't think a post should be edited for the sole purpose of removing a polite greeting or "thank you."

share|improve this answer
5  
A few points: 1) Your tone comes through just fine without the thanks. You're obviously both polite and intelligent. 2) Your "plain and simple" part is already generally accepted (and John Saunders did not merely remove the thank-you). 3) It is my general practice to remove any greeting longer than "Hi", but to leave any coherent "thank you"; this has not changed in quite some time, as you can see from the link in Geoffrey Chetwood's answer. 4) Those with editing privileges are asked to respect the original author, so if this happens and you revert it, people will most likely leave it alone. – mmyers Jan 13 '11 at 22:14
1  
@Michael Myers - First of all, thank you for the complement. Also, I do realize John didn't solely edit to remove the "thank you," and I did acknowledge that and thanked him for pointing out the edits that did need to be made. I'm glad that most respect the author's freedom to throw in a "thank you" at the end. I don't mean to come off as angry by the above post (nor by my comments to John) I was just thrown off because I didn't see the advantage of taking out the "thank you," especially being as I was raised to always use my "yes ma'ams," "no sirs," "pleases," and "thank yous." – AmbiguousX Jan 13 '11 at 22:24
But that's just my personal preference on it. John pointed me to this question and so even though this discussion appeared to have been sedentary for some time, I thought I'd go ahead and throw my two cents into the conversation regardless. – AmbiguousX Jan 13 '11 at 22:26
3  
Relax, and just learn from the edits (and the pointers John gave you to this question before your 2nd comment). – Arjan Jan 13 '11 at 23:04
8  
It has been, and will continue to be, my practice to remove all greetings and thanks. You are assumed to have said "hi" when you posted the question. You can best "thank" people who respond to your question by upvoting their answers. The rest is noise. – John Saunders Jan 14 '11 at 1:46
1  
@John (and @Arjan), I apologize for overreacting on this issue, and I apologize if I made you upset with any of my comments. I honestly didn't mean anything by it except to just speak my piece. Thank you, though, for pointing me to this conversation, and thank you for your edits. I hope you have a fantastic day. – AmbiguousX Jan 14 '11 at 15:02
2  
@Ambig: I'm not upset at all. I pointed you to meta, and you came. That was good. I hope to see you around. – John Saunders Jan 14 '11 at 19:39
It has been, and will continue to be, my practice to to rollback when someone removed my greetings and thanks. – user156914 Mar 16 '11 at 8:33
@John Saunders, most of my questions on stackoverflow.com have greetings and thanks, if you or someone else remove them, I simply roll it back. – user156914 Mar 16 '11 at 8:50
1  
@caveman: it's up to you. My next step would be to flag your question. – John Saunders Mar 17 '11 at 17:51
@John Saunders: You can phone your friends on stackoverflow.com to flag all of my questions, or ban my IP forever. I don't care. – user156914 Mar 17 '11 at 18:15
@caveman: no, the next step would be for me to flag your question. If anyone else also flags it, that's up to them. This is my opinion, not necessarily the opinion of my "friends". – John Saunders Mar 17 '11 at 18:22
1  
"When in rome do as the romans", otherwise don't take part! – Ian Ringrose Jun 6 '11 at 12:00
@IanRingrose: Rome fell! – Lightness Races in Orbit Jan 6 '12 at 19:42
2  
@IanRingrose: I'm not sure I understand the relevance of the USA. – Lightness Races in Orbit Feb 25 '12 at 19:09
show 1 more comment

While I completely understand the point of cleaning up a question so that the meat of the question becomes clearer and quicker to the point, it's utterly ridiculous for either the asker or the editor to go beyond a simple, quick edit.

When rollback wars begin, everybody suffers, and the whole thing turns into a big pissing match. Meanwhile, people like me who are able to read past things like "Hello" and "Thank you" now have to deal with two people's argument about the whole ordeal.

In the worst case scenario, the question gets voted out of existence simply because of some person's desire to be polite.

Cool.

That means that everybody else doesn't get to read and learn from the question...which, in my mind is 10x worse than having to deal with a simple salutation.

SHORT ANSWER?

Alright, make a change if it bothers you...but chill the hell out after that. Don't piss on a question if things don't go your way. And, certainly don't get all pouty about it...someone's just trying to be nice.

And, if you ask a question and someone edits out your salutation...deal with it, just the same. Be a big boy/girl and worry about getting the answer to your question, instead of turning yourself into a martyr.

share|improve this answer
1  
I haven't experienced these edit wars. Are they real? – Shep May 7 '12 at 20:17
1  
@she - yes.​​​​​​​ – Lix May 7 '12 at 20:22
2  
You are correct - this shouldn't happen. If you see it, flag for a moderator... And then walk away. See also: blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/04/in-defense-of-editing – Shog9 May 7 '12 at 20:23
2  
How about leaving the decision of how an editor spends their time to the editor? – GEOCHET May 9 '12 at 21:55
@Shep Totally happens all the time. I'm not even ragin' about something that happened to me...recently I found a question that asked something that was EXACTLY what I was wondering, but some dude got all ansy cuz of a "thank you" and got his buddies to vote out the question entirely. So, I was the one that suffered. – johnnietheblack May 11 '12 at 19:12
@GEOCHET Fair enough, and I agree. However, I'm not concerned with inconveniencing the editor...that's not my point. I'm concerned with people like me who just want to read the question and the answers. It's not the editor's right to throw any obstacle in my way. – johnnietheblack May 11 '12 at 19:15

I feel like robot enough , please let us feel like human with a little "hi" or "thanks" There is nothing wrong with this i think... No dont remove , especially askers may use hi or thanks.

share|improve this answer
7  
Other than "this is what I think". Is there any other arguments that you can put forward? If not, this is not really an answer and should have just been an up/downvote on the posts that you agree/disagree with. – Lix Apr 16 at 8:15
Nice ! You are from us ... who are still human :)... but easy maan ... title is -Should 'Hi', 'thanks,' taglines, and salutations be removed from posts?- and i say NO ... sure this is my opinion , question asks that already – Erdinç Çorbacı Apr 16 at 8:18
Beep beep beep... uhh... I mean sure I'm human!... hehe... Basically, what I'm saying is that saying I agree (or not) is exactly what the voting mechanism is for. If you want to add your own twist or explain your opinion, then post an answer. However an answer only saying YES/NO is not really an answer. It's much easier to gauge how much the community supports a suggestion by the votes on the question/answer than it is to go though all (33) answers and manually count the users that say "I agree!" or "No thanks!". – Lix Apr 16 at 8:23
1  
I can't tell you what to do - and I won't. You are free to post answers as you see fit and however you want. Together with that, users are free to use their votes and comments to voice their opinions and let you know whether they agree with you or not. I'm not saying that you have to write an entire blog post for each answer - but (at least here on meta) you are expected to provide some explanation or add constructively to the discussion. – Lix Apr 16 at 8:34
As a last comment i'm happy with my answer it's short but clear "keep salutations for not feeling like robots" is the main idea.... btw i DON'T CARE about reps, downvotes or etc. I will keep writing what think. Thanks for your respect. – Erdinç Çorbacı Apr 16 at 8:40

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged