58

In question Using a void* to change a char I gave a working line of code to help solve the OP's issue (making it clearer than the previous comment).

I've read Why do some people answer in comments?, and that seemed to be the consensus here, specially when:

  • the question is average/below par/borderline for "no MCVE/why isn't that code working"
  • not a duplicate, or not clearly a duplicate (this would be too far fetched)
  • answering would mean to fix this issue, but also the potential issues of the OP in other parts of code (since there isn't any MCVE)

So why am I pinged by a high-rep user advising me "not to answer in comments"?

Enter image description here

Should I just vote to close and not even try to help the OP? Or waste my time providing an answer that will clutter the site and may not get an upvote or acceptance?

(to illustrate this, in the meanwhile I have tried to make an effort and make complete answers out of comments and that didn't turn out so well: Close Program when Compiling with gcc)

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  • 13
    Vote to close because of "unclear what you're asking". Downvote, too. ~next
    – user9455968
    Jul 16, 2018 at 10:13
  • 25
    voting to close: done. But why not trying to help the OP? Jul 16, 2018 at 10:14
  • 43
    I sometimes leave a can you try <awesome line of code> to verify if my assumption about their context is right. That line might immediately fix their issue which I see more as a side-effect of my intention. Knowing it is fixed , I move on. I can't really fix the perception that others see that as answering in comments.
    – rene
    Jul 16, 2018 at 10:23
  • 99
    @rene please don't answer in comments. Write a real answer Jul 16, 2018 at 10:25
  • 9
    Your last comment looks a little bit ironic.
    – user9455968
    Jul 16, 2018 at 10:29
  • 10
    I wouldn't take it seriously. Someone went overboard once and commented "Don't help these timewasters, people like you should be banned." It doesn't take long to realise on SO you can't please everyone. I'd just flag the comment as "Obsolete / no longer required" and move on, since I don't like long detours in comments.
    – jpp
    Jul 16, 2018 at 10:32
  • 1
    Its difficult. It can be tempting to try and help out to move things forward and we all do it, but it can just as easily derail the situation further. Everything has a proper timing to it, it might be that offering help in a comment will simply turn the situation into a "getting tech support in comments" kind of deal, a lost cause. The proper order should be closure and after the closure happens and the OP has their attention turned from getting a solution ASAP to understanding what's up, that is the moment to start and help out.
    – Gimby
    Jul 16, 2018 at 10:56
  • 3
    @LutzHorn I think it may be sarcasm.
    – Script47
    Jul 16, 2018 at 11:28
  • 32
    I don't agree with Clifford here. If you don't have the time or capacity to write a full answer, it's totally fine to leave a comment IMO. It's much better than leaving a half-baked answer and it's the principle I'm trying to follow as well. (Fun fact - I started to type this as an answer, but realized that it's better as a comment. Self-proving a point is the best example.) Jul 16, 2018 at 11:46
  • 5
    @the4kman : If you don't have the time or capacity, and the question is barely ten minutes old, leave it - someone else will post a better and more complete answer. Note I have added an answer rather than a comment to this - you might comment on that rather then commenting on what Jean says is my opinion!
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 11:59
  • 14
    See how non productive all these rules are. Seriously...this question wouldn't come up if we didn't have the mods sniping AWESOME comments every once in a while and putting in their "Comments moved to chat..." even when the comments clearly relate to the question. It is all becoming a waste of time.
    – JonH
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:57
  • 7
    People answer in comments because thy're on their phone and creating an actual response in the Answers section is 'too hard'. (direct quote from a recent comment 'answer').
    – user4039065
    Jul 16, 2018 at 15:52
  • 3
    that wasn't my intention. The idea was to provide OP a beginning of solution, without fixing the code completely because there was too much work Jul 16, 2018 at 16:15
  • 3
    @Jean-FrançoisFabre The better way to put that is that you offered the beginnings of a future answer (to be written by someone else), you were not providing it specifically to the OP so they can run away and never be seen again leaving behind a question in limbo.
    – Gimby
    Jul 17, 2018 at 8:16
  • 4
    @Gimby Thats also a valid point. Often someone else will take such a comment and extrapolate it into an answer, serving a valid purpose after all.
    – Magisch
    Jul 17, 2018 at 12:05

9 Answers 9

77

Not sure here, I've certainly engaged in "have you tried $technique?" comments before to try and help OP narrow their question down. Often times, this also ends up solving the question.

It's true that you shouldn't write full answers in comments, but I think leaving pointers for OP to clarify (...or realise the futility of) their questions falls under the "suggest improvement or clarification" part of the comment mandate.

You mentioned the prime reason yourself: OP may have multiple problems with their code, and you're trying to narrow it down. If that happens to solve OP's problem along the way, oh well...

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    Many times, comments like these that end up solving the problem are responded to by the OP with something like "That worked, if you make that an answer I'll accept it." Jul 16, 2018 at 19:37
  • 4
    @DavidStarkey In fact, we can see in the screenshot that it was indeed the case that the OP asked for it to be made an answer so he could accept it.
    – Baldrickk
    Jul 17, 2018 at 12:03
30

Let's first establish that the question is on-topic. If it isn't then answering is, in comments or as a proper answer, a no-no. Those questions are best close voted and down voted (to push them off the front page). Those questions are expected to roomba but if a question doesn't attract enough close votes in time, two comments will already block the roomba for ever. Your helping comments made the site worse.

With an on-topic question it becomes a bit more diffuse. Leave comments to:

  • verify/confirm your own assumptions
  • verify/confirm assumptions of the OP
  • rule out any obvious fixes the OP might have already tried
  • verify/confirm if specific Q/A, blogs, documentation has been seen

Any of those type of comments might accidentally answer the question. If it does, it is up to you how to proceed. Either point out that self-answering is allowed and encouraged , step over your initial desire to not write an answer or rely on the other members to write a proper answer.

I don't see much need to @-reply other commentors or it must be for clarification / warning about their suggestions, maybe an encouraging pat on the back to write an answer if you like what you see.

In all cases, clean-up comments once they served their purpose.

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  • 7
    As noted in my answer, down-voting can be very discouraging for new users - it feels like (and often is intended as) punishment.for Naivety and inexperience. I'd suggest improve or encourage improvement first, close-vote if the improvement is not forthcoming, and never down-vote for that reason; it is clearly not within the guidelines for down-voting at stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/vote-down
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:07
  • 11
    I think posting an off-topic question is an egregiously sloppy, no-effort-expended post so that is clearly within the guidelines and as you have noticed that is the only case where I advocate down voting. On the other case I have no voting advice at all as that is not where the question is about, nor this answer should be about.
    – rene
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:14
  • 3
    Sometimes; but it is also a matter of opinion, the justification for the specific question cited in this case being "off-topic" entirely eludes me. Everything needed to answer the question is there. If a question has answers you need to consider carefully perhaps before voting it down for insufficient information to answer - because others clearly differ, and may be spotting information you have missed. The point about "not meant as a substitute for communication and editing" is important here perhaps.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:25
  • 4
    I get in perhaps two down-votes a year - I just feels harsh, especially for new users finding their feet. Also it is just too easy to down-vote rather then comment constructively - seems somewhat lazy, the target may never know why he has been targeted, and will never learn..
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:27
  • 2
    I get of plenty of down votes and I don't care. Also this MSO question isn't tagged specific-question so I answer what if I don't want to answer but still want to help and in that broader context the special case for off-topic questions is warranted, at least in my opinion.
    – rene
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:31
  • 1
    I take the point about not commenting on other users comments - that was pointed out as contrary to guidelines also. In this case his answer had already been posted as an answer by another user - it was only a few minutes after the question was posted, the comment itself seemed unnecessary at that time - real answers were forthcoming. I have in the past suggested commenters post an answer, only to be told that the do not wish to expose themselves to down-votes and criticism or that they cannot be bothered to post something more complete - these are weak arguments IMO.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:35
  • 1
    I don't think anyone should be forced to write an answer if they have indicated they don't want to, whatever their argument. If comments on a question are no longer relevant due to their content being covered by an answer the comments can be flagged as no longer needed, maybe with a mod flag in case it isn't directly clear how the comment is covered in an answer.
    – rene
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:45
  • 2
    @Clifford That's why we suggest to add a comment when downvoting. Having a myriad of downvotes with no explanation can be demoralizing, but if you take the time to point out why they're being downvoted, the new user should be an adult enough to handle constructive criticism.
    – krillgar
    Jul 16, 2018 at 13:13
  • 2
    @krillgar : I'd advocate posting the comment, and later down-voting if appropriate action was not taken to resolve the issue. The danger otherwise is you comment and down-vote and never return; in the meantime your point may be taken and the cause of your down-vote removed, but not the down-vote itself.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 14:47
  • 1
    @Clifford Or you never return to check and see if the downvote is still warranted. In most cases, I've been tagged in a responding comment that it has been addressed, or further clarification is made. I've removed my downvote when the question has been improved..
    – krillgar
    Jul 16, 2018 at 15:59
  • 2
    Why do comments stop the roomba? Do you have a link to any post discussing why this is the case?
    – zero298
    Jul 16, 2018 at 16:35
  • 1
    @zero298 here in the 365 days criteria has 1 or 0 comments
    – rene
    Jul 16, 2018 at 16:43
  • Yes, but WHY is "1 or 0 comments" the criteria? Is there any evidence it is a good/bad/indifferent criteria? Jul 17, 2018 at 18:41
  • @JohnHascall I guess Shog9 queried SEDE for an hour and with these criteria he didn't delete 80% of the questions which seemed good to him. The uber meta has some posts: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/173513/…
    – rene
    Jul 17, 2018 at 18:49
  • If I'm reading that right, it only only apply to questions with a score of exactly zero, otherwise the 9-day cleaner would have gotten it. Correct? Seems to me that "0 or 1 comments" isn't all that helpful a criteria. Jul 17, 2018 at 19:03
14

While some questions don't contain a perfect MCVE, some contain enough evidence that the question asker has tried (to the best of their ability) to post everything they think is relevant, and would probably be receptive to putting more effort into that if prompted with more specific advice about what to include.

Sometimes, you just have to ask them to try something in order to confirm a hunch, and that ends up fixing their immediate concern. That doesn't necessarily mean you've answered the question, though, especially if what you suggested was a bit of a dirty hack to just find out what's going on.

So, fish all ye will in good faith to help someone as long as you have at least some confidence that you'll be interested in writing a more comprehensive answer. It doesn't obligate you to write a masterpiece, but it's a better use of everyone's time if you at least consider fully engaging with the question in your attempts to help suss out what might be at hand. After all, something got you curious enough to ask, right?

Remember, folks probably won't spend time writing an answer if they see that you've satisfied the OP's most urgent concerns in comments, so please do consider leaving some crumbs for the next passer-by. In this instance, one might expand on variable scope, safe string handling, why it's good to be explicit about type safety and other stuff - so there was a moment to teach there.

While not stellar, we don't need an included header and main() entry point with a mock unit test in order to see what's going on there, and I think it's quite onerous to demand it simply to follow form when it's not specifically needed. The code ended up going in there, numerous issues were easy to spot - it wasn't undeserving of an answer.

But just use your best judgement. Sometimes we poke a bit to see if we can suss it out and see a can of worms which we immediately want to avoid - that's okay. As long as you're not specifically dodging something by using a comment, and you have a decent history of writing nice answers, you probably have nothing to worry about.

I'm not going to pretend that question was stellar, but it was answerable and offered a moment to teach so .. maybe we're holding the tea cups a little too primly in these days :)

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  • 4
    yes, c tag is very unforgiving since forever (well, at least since 2016 when I registered). Very wise answer. Jul 17, 2018 at 14:51
  • 1
    Note, that the result of such sussing should be incorporated into the question.
    – Braiam
    Jul 17, 2018 at 15:15
6

When you click "add a comment" link underneath an answer, you are presented with this textbox:

screencap with comment boiler plate text

The help text is quite clear that answering directly in the comments is discouraged:

Avoid answering questions in comments.

Comments cannot be downvoted, only upvoted, and so an answer that could otherwise be at +5/-10 would just appear as +5. An answer in the comment can not be properly vetted by the community. You cannot edit comments to improve them after 5 minutes.

Stack Overflow is intended to be a high quality resource of questions and answers. The quality control is possible because of voting, edits, and deletion. Answers in comments are detrimental to the site because they bypass the usual quality controls that apply to answers.

What if I don't want to answer but still want to help?

You can help by getting the question into an answerable state. This might be through edits, or clarifying comments. Or you can help by finding an appropriate duplicate, or linking in a closely related Q&A. If the question is just bad and can't be improved, you can help by downvoting it. This helps the OP to learn about what gets downvoted and what doesn't, and it helps the community so they know not to bother clicking on a question with a deep negative score.

Answering in a comment makes the dubious assumption that your answer is correct and should be exempt from the usual quality controls applying to answers. We all make mistakes, so this is never a safe assumption.

4
  • 1
    good points made, even if I find this answer a little too "by the book" for me. I asked the question because I really disliked that who-know-better-than-me people ping me to tell me "don't do that". Maybe next time they should try flagging see what happens. Sep 5, 2018 at 20:55
  • @Jean flagging a comment based on its technical merits, or absence of community vetting therein (which is the reason evoked in this answer for telling someone they should not answer in comments) only leads to declined flag and wasted moderator time, I'd hazard you know that :) telling other SO users through comments how one sees sharing the community's space sounds like an ok thing to do. Sep 6, 2018 at 4:28
  • it's different to invite someone to answer (because the comment has answering potential) than to lambast someone because he's answering in comments. In our particular "argument" with wim (I upvoted the answer above, though), I must admit that I don't hold the commenter in my heart, and his comment/answer wasn't very good (also wrong). Instead of patronizing the guy with "don't answer in comments", I would have commented back to tell him: this is plain wrong (with technical arguments). A question of personal style, probably. Sep 6, 2018 at 5:49
  • But asking a user to avoid answering questions in the comments is not to "lambast someone" or "patronizing the guy", unless the language/tone is obviously mean.
    – wim
    Sep 7, 2018 at 3:06
4

Comments regarding meta discussions should instead be meta posts regarding the behavior in general.

Meta was created in order to move the type of discussion about answering, helping, etc. in comments away from the main site. Do not engage in meta commentary on the main site.

  • If you see meta commentary on the main site, flag it as no longer needed.

Should I just vote to close and not even try to help OP? Or waste my time answering an answer that will clutter the site and may not get an upvote or acceptance?

If the post is going to be closed and removed, then isn't commenting also wasting time? This really depends on how you want to spend your time, and it isn't really right for anyone here to tell you not to. That said, if the question remains open, and your answer does not get an upvote or accepted, that doesn't mean you shouldn't post an answer. If the comment was truly an answer, it should be in an answer, regardless of if it will get accepted or upvoted. If the comment was merely a partial suggestion of something that may or may not work, then a comment is probably the best place for it.

  • Answering in comments is not really ideal, and it should be avoided.

  • Using comments for suggestions or unverified approaches should be encouraged.

4
  • In context, what is the difference between an answer, a suggestion and an unverified approach?
    – Makoto
    Jul 16, 2018 at 22:40
  • @Makoto - What aspect of differentiation there was unclear? The terms are fairly well defined and used here on the site, as well as with their general definitions in the field.
    – Travis J
    Jul 16, 2018 at 22:45
  • Neither "suggestion" nor "unverified approach" are mutually exclusive of "answer"... or each other. It is entirely possible (and acceptable) for an answer to suggest an unverified approach.
    – user4639281
    Jul 17, 2018 at 15:06
  • To some degree @TinyGiant, sure there are overlapping possibilities. However, I thought it was pretty clear we are talking about single sentence responses here. Answers which are one liner "try using .indexOf('foo')" are best left to comments (or wiki posts).
    – Travis J
    Jul 17, 2018 at 16:28
2

The important question is: why don't you want to answer?

If the question should be closed, it's much more important not to answer, than to avoid "answering" in the comments. If you can fix the problem with the question without input from the OP, then do that rather than expecting OP to do it. But otherwise, tailor what you write to the close reason you have in mind:

  • Unclear (and you can't clarify it)? Sometimes, depending on how OP clarifies some ambiguity in the question, you might want to close it as a duplicate of different possible options. Or maybe in one case it's a duplicate and in the other case it's a valid question, etc. etc. So, say those things, and offer possible duplicate links if appropriate. (Of course, VTC as duplicate instead if you're reasonably sure.)

  • Duplicate, but non-obviously? Feel free to write a short explanation of why the duplicate you propose addresses the problem. In particular, if there's a long code sample and your response is "oh, the problem is here, and it's a common duplicate" - definitely do not write an answer to "find the bug". Duplicates are duplicates. A comment that points out the problem and then links the canonical is fine, even though other places on the internet might think of that as an "answer".

  • Needs more focus, because there are multiple problems? If they aren't all duplicates, feel free to identify what those problems are, in the course of noting that this makes the question unsuitable for Stack Overflow.

There are lots of other ways it could go, I'm sure, but hopefully you get the idea.

That said, if the question should stay open, then definitely don't answer in the comments.

  • If it's "too easy" - that isn't a reason not to answer - but it is a reason to try to think about what the underlying problem is, extract its general form, and go looking for a canonical duplicate.

  • If you only have a partial solution or an idea about a solution - post it anyway, and consider making it community wiki.

In the case being discussed here, the underlying question seems pretty straightforward to me - and OP's framing is a bit misleading. The problem isn't to do with the weirdness of void* at all; it's just the usual issue of implementing "pass by pointer" properly - in this case, the passed-in pointer is to a buffer that the calling code needs to write into, and the code tried to use a local buffer and then assign its pointer back to the parameter (which is wrong twice: the assignment isn't useful because the pointer was passed by value, and the local buffer will be out of scope). Answers - as well as the comment described here - proposed to copy the local buffer's contents into the one pointed at by the parameter. As far as I can tell, it should have equally worked to cast the pointer and sscanf directly into the pointed-at buffer. Both of those look to me like standard approaches to a very common, and very general problem, that ought to have a canonical.


There's one borderline case that requires judgment: when OP's code has multiple issues, but the question only seems to be asking about one. Answering about that one often leads OP to try to ask about the others (especially since resolving an error may allow the other problems to surface, when the code otherwise couldn't have executed). Depending on the circumstances, this could have many different resolutions:

  • Close as a duplicate of the asked-about problem, and comment to highlight the other problems

  • Close as multiple duplicates for the problems in the code, and comment to explain

  • Fix the example to be a proper MRE first, then answer about it

But please, please don't write answers that answer multiple questions; and avoid addressing "incidental" issues in answers. And please, please don't let OP get away with receiving an answer about the "main" question and then editing to focus on a new one. The goal is to answer the question that was asked, and to have a question that prompts the answers that are posted, and have it be a single question with all the answers being about the same thing - so that the Q&A pair helps build a Q&A library. This is not a discussion forum, and as such, the goal is not to get OP's code to work.

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-22

Lest we let this get away from us...

"Helping" on Stack Overflow implies "answering".

That is, if you want to help someone with a question, you are by default answering their question. After all, answers are the only thing on the site which provide value; comments are temporal in nature and can be deleted for any reason.

If you don't want to help someone, you don't want to answer. If you don't want to answer, then there's no mandate suggesting that you need to do anything else to the question (e.g. vote, close, etc).

You're free to not engage with any question you wish. But if you do want to engage in a question, don't be hesitant to commit to answering. At the end of the day, only answers actually help the OP and others, as well as allow the system to function properly and expose good answers.

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  • 2
    I disagree that answers are the only way to help. They might be the only way to solve the posted issue, but the user can be helped a number of ways, like helping a new user understand how SE works or helping any user better clarify the problem they are having. Jul 16, 2018 at 19:42
  • 4
    Maybe we need a clearer definition on what "helping" is. For instance, do we consider a comment such as this one helpful? I would naturally assume that it is, even though there is certainly no intent of answering. Sending a user to another site in the network for their pure maths or machine learning question may also be considered helpful for everyone. For "helping" to imply "answering", you're also assuming that we cannot be helpful towards unanswerable questions.
    – E_net4
    Jul 16, 2018 at 19:45
  • 3
    So what you're saying is, if I don't know how to answer a particular question then I have no business in giving any feedback? If a question is well-structured and I don't know how to answer it, shouldn't I upvote that answer to make it more visible towards others who may know? If a question is poorly structured, shouldn't I downvote it as a way of expressing that it is unsuitable for Stack Overflow in its current form? If a question is lacking in particular details, shouldn't I comment to try and obtain those details from OP? Jul 16, 2018 at 20:28
  • 4
    What I'm trying to say is that there are plenty of ways I can help the OP and other users of Stack Overflow without necessarily committing to answer a question. Jul 16, 2018 at 20:28
  • @DavidStarkey: Help documentation and Meta exist to help a user understand how SE works. Comments exist to allow a bystander or prospective answerer to ask clarifying questions of the OP to determine if their question is answerable (above all), if it makes sense, and what the actual problem is. Conflating these two services is dangerous, and gives comments the puffed-up position that they enjoy today.
    – Makoto
    Jul 16, 2018 at 20:50
  • @E_net4: I have absolutely no faith in any comment that says (in brief), "Your question is on topic over here." The reason for that is that there is more than enough case study to prove that users have a very, very low success rate when determining which site content belongs on. So yes, I would consider that comment unhelpful given that such a comment may trap an OP between communities in which their question may or may not fit.
    – Makoto
    Jul 16, 2018 at 20:53
  • @E_net4: Also, we don't migrate crap as a policy. I'm thoroughly unconvinced that the question you linked to is even any good.
    – Makoto
    Jul 16, 2018 at 20:54
  • 1
    @MichaelDodd: If you don't know how to answer the question, then don't answer the question. If the question is unclear, ask a clarifying comment of it. If you believe it to be a good question, then upvote it. If you believe it to be bad, then downvote it. If you believe it to be off-topic, then flag/vote to close it. None of those actions are mandatory, which was my point. You could choose to ignore it if you felt so inclined.
    – Makoto
    Jul 16, 2018 at 20:55
  • 1
    @Makoto By no means did I suggest that the linked question was salvageable, but it still is useful: it directs the user to a place where they can receive assistance in what they were originally working for without cluttering SO with more bad questions.
    – E_net4
    Jul 16, 2018 at 20:56
  • @E_net4: No, you're just moving the dust pile from one corner of the house to another. If the question isn't salvageable, it should be laid to rest right where it lies.
    – Makoto
    Jul 16, 2018 at 20:57
  • 2
    @Makoto A request for an off-site resource can become acceptable outside the SE network. It's no longer a pile of dust in that sense.
    – E_net4
    Jul 16, 2018 at 20:58
  • 7
    @Makoto the aforementioned comment says that the question is off topic and points the OP at non-Stack Exchange sites / forums / chatrooms where the question will be welcomed. Do I understand your point correctly — pointing someone to a better location to ask recommendation questions is actively unhelpful?
    – Shepmaster
    Jul 17, 2018 at 1:39
  • 6
    How useful is the comment — it's a chance to make one person feel less alienated about Stack Overflow (plus bonus points for others who incidentally read it). Perhaps they will contribute more (on topic) in the future as opposed to being angry at a bunch of faceless Internet users and never coming back to SO. It allows us over in rust to provide a better experience than c or java or c++ or whatever, which reflects on our community and our values on the world outside SO.
    – Shepmaster
    Jul 17, 2018 at 2:54
  • 5
    I do agree that the comment in question doesn't help make this question a better part of a repository of answers, but I think that's OK because the question should be deleted. That problem is going to take care of itself; this comment just helps OP learn from their mistakes and solve their problem in the meantime. This circles back to the original point: can we help if we don't want to (should not) answer? Your point, which I see now you mean in very black-and-white terms, is that if you cannot (should not) answer, you should not comment. I disagree, but that's neither here nor there.
    – Shepmaster
    Jul 17, 2018 at 2:59
  • 1
    @Makoto I'm not suggesting the documentation is not useful. However, it takes an experienced user to point new users in the right direction, like pointing out the FAQ. Even seasoned users occasionally need guidance, like a link to the most recent meta discussion on a topic. Outside of documentation, some of the comment-answers could also be seen as requests to edit the OP to include what's been tried. It's just, saying "Have you tried X" sounds friendlier (and more helpful) than "Edit in what you've tried". Jul 17, 2018 at 19:57
-22

The practice has the potential to shut-down the question - the OP walks away problem solved and has no incentive to improve the question to the point that it becomes part of the valuable community resource or Q&A that is Stack Overflow.

By getting in a comment-answer before anyone has had a chance to answer more conventionally and fully, you rather steal the wind from those that take the trouble. I don't think the "I have something to contribute, but not enough to warrant an answer" approach is legitimate; if that is the case, leave it to others - especially if the question is only a few minutes old.

I think that if the question as unclear or incomplete, that should be commented on and clarification sought. When a question is barely a few minutes old I'd suggest commenting first, and only if the OP has not improved the question in a timely fashion (and I'd normally allow 24 hours to allow for timezone differences), might you vote to close. A salvageable question seldom recovers from a closure, even when adequately improved, and it can be very discouraging for new users to have their questions knocked down before they get a chance to find their feet. I'd certainly refrain from downvoting in most cases. Naivety and inexperience should not be "punishable" offences.

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    By getting in a comment-answer before anyone has had a chance to answer more conventionally and fully, you rather steal the wind from those that take the trouble. - I wouldn't consider that an issue, just add the answer anyway. In the log run the more fleshed-out answers tend to get more upvotes by future visitors even if they aren't always considered the "accepted" answer by OP. Jul 16, 2018 at 11:26
  • 26
    I regularly use comments to narrow the scope and give a quick line of code that could be an answer, usually when closing the question as a dupe or as an incomplete debugging issue. Sometimes because I don’t think I have a complete answer or time to write a proper answer. I can’t see why that'd be taking the wind out of someone’s sails. Please don’t tell people to “not answer in comments”; you could instead be more encouraging and invite them to post a full answer if you think it worth an answer.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 16, 2018 at 11:40
  • 14
    And no, comments are not nearly rich enough to convey proper answers and people should not fear accusations of plagiarism if an idea or code snippet has been shared in a comment. A good, helpful answer is clearly going to require more work than just copying a line of code, and more power to those that put in that work.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 16, 2018 at 11:42
  • 2
    @MartijnPieters : That is not how I interpret the guidelines at stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/comment.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 11:51
  • 5
    Wow - I'm taking some punishment here - for adhering to guidelines rather then opinion. Oh well. I'll stand my ground I think. Note the answer has been heavily edited to be more general and less personal - that was previously inappropriate.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:13
  • 9
    I agree with most of what you say, but your continued references to punishment are just a deal breaker. Downvoting != punishment.
    – Gimby
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:20
  • 7
    Downvoting in meta, even less so.
    – yivi
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:20
  • 2
    FWIW, it is confusing that the same rules supposedly apply across the network, but enforcement is so vastly different. Moderators on some of the other sites on the SE network do enforce no-answers-in-comments as a hard rule.
    – user743382
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:23
  • 3
    By getting in a comment-answer before anyone has had a chance to answer more conventionally and fully, you rather steal the wind from those that take the trouble. This, combined with the fact that comments cannot be downvoted upon (to avoid OP from assuming them as the right answer and then coming back after a day with a follow-up question) are compelling enough reason to discourage answering in comments. Jul 16, 2018 at 12:27
  • 1
    @Clifford I'm guessing it is because the help page says "Comments are not recommended for any of the following". Emphasis mine. Jul 16, 2018 at 12:29
  • 3
    IN the case of 'NULL terminator missing', 'not enough space allcoated for termiantor', 'correctly and completely handle the results returned from system calls like recv()', I don't want anyone to answer. Any 'real' answer would be a pan-galactic dupe and not worth it. If I can help the OP and, at the same time, get a bad question removed, why not? I certainly don't want rep for such questions. Jul 16, 2018 at 12:35
  • 2
    @Gimby : Agreed, I was being somewhat rhetorical. However while down-voting is not provided for the purposes of punishment; it is clearly often used as such, or at least may feel like that to the target who may have no clue what they have done wrong. I'd rather not discourage new users of SO (and it is discouraging); they may one day have something genuinely valuable to contribute.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 12:56
  • 11
    @Clifford: “not recommended” is not the same as “you must not do this”. Not recommended means that if you see this happen, it’s best to gently steer the other user to a better action or flag as no longer needed or to leave it be. Please don’t interpret “not recommended” as “I need to tell the other person not to do that”, because there is no reason to.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Jul 16, 2018 at 13:07
  • 2
    @Dragonrage :You are simply telling me what down-voting is for; I understand that - that is not what I am saying. I am simply expressing an opinion based on observation of behaviour - take it or leave it. I remain astonished that the consensus seems far harsher than the my interpretation of the guidelines. I see no reason to both close-vote and down-vote - one removes bad questions, the other affects the personal reputation of other users; users finding their feet on SO don't deserve that personal hit - it is unhelpful. If they have rep and should know better - sure fair game.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 16:22
  • 2
    I do not take your point about the visibility of close votes - it does not matter - the worse a question is the faster it will be closed. Who needs to see that process? That is two punitive actions for one offence - which is hardly fair.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 19:57
-26

To specifically address:

What if I don't want to answer but still want to help?

Providing an answer or even a hint in a comment may help the OP but does little to enhance the community resource of questions and answers. So I suggest do nothing.

6
  • 9
    but answering a question that only interests the OP doesn't enhance the community resource either. Jul 16, 2018 at 13:01
  • 4
    "This should be a comment" hehe Jul 16, 2018 at 14:28
  • @Jean-FrançoisFabre : I am not sure I am able to determine what ultimately turns out to be useful and what does not. The question was answerable IMO - answer it; if the question is closed so be it; if any one objects to your posting in good faith and it attracts down-votes you are able to delete the answer if you wish.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 14:39
  • 1
    @Clifford I am sure most people looking for an answer will read comments too if the question is not answered. That way isn't it helping the community ?
    – Amit
    Jul 16, 2018 at 16:00
  • @AmitDwivedi : Not really; comments are regarded as temporary and I am pretty sure are not indexed for search either within SO or external search engines. I have certainly never found a search hit for a comment, and the only way anyone is normally going to find an existing answer or question on a specific subject is by searching.
    – Clifford
    Jul 16, 2018 at 16:06
  • @Jean-FrançoisFabre: "but answering a question that only interests the OP doesn't enhance the community resource either." If the question is on-topic for SO, then answering it enhances the community resource. Indeed, that's how we define "on-topic". Your problem seems more that you disagree with what we consider "on-topic", which is an entirely different matter. But even if you disagree, posting answers as comments doesn't help the site accomplish what it's trying to. Jul 16, 2018 at 19:06

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