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May 8, 2014 at 18:42 comment added nsfyn55 +1 for "brutal". Unfortunately this post isn't available to me but speaking from past experience, telling a person how to formulate a better question is a great use for a comment. Telling them why you are voting to close is a great use for a comment. In other instances I have seen a responder with 30K rep tell a person to "hire someone qualified". Comments like these are not constructive and should be flagged as such.
May 8, 2014 at 14:52 comment added Richard Le Mesurier +1 for "brutal", as Hans Then says in him "C'mon..." comment. This meta forum is full of posts trying to convince all moderators to be brutal in our assessment of things. A lot of mods also say don't bother commenting - just downvote, or vote to close. Comments take too much time. Basically - that is brutal.
May 7, 2014 at 19:49 comment added McNab Good on you for coming here and posting that. An excellent answer, erudite and well reasoned. If only more newcomers acted and behaved like you. Stick around.
May 7, 2014 at 14:20 comment added l4mpi @HansThen it was also not the case that Frédéric was being rude or even "brutal" to OP, I'd say he was being very polite. I'm just arguing against sugarcoating things, as being as nice as possible was never and should never be a requirement - not being offensive and/or obnoxious is the requirement. Also, people shouldn't consult lawyers before posting to SO but most of the newcomers would definitely benefit from lurking more before attempting to participate.
May 7, 2014 at 13:53 comment added Hans Then That was not the case here. The OP should maybe not have retracted his original question, but his reformulation was clear enough. It was not a crappy question and it did not disregard the rules and conventions of the site. You make it sound like new users should first consult with a lawyer before entering the shark pool that is Stack Overflow.
May 7, 2014 at 13:17 comment added l4mpi @HansThen and even more people are IMO very rude to the established community of StackOverflow by posting heaps of crappy questions with complete disregard to the rules and conventions of the site. I don't see why I should try to be as polite as possible to people like this. Actually, I already consider explaining the problems with their post (in a clear, direct way) as being polite - I could also just downvote and move on.
May 7, 2014 at 13:13 comment added dirkk @l4mpi I do agree with your comment, but I want to point out that this is a very fine line. What is "brutal", "offensive" or "sugarcoated" highly depends on your culture and many (US-)Americans or Europeans might simply see as direct, other cultures might see as offensive. I don't want to imply that we therefore shouldn't be clear in our actions, but it should just serve as a reminder when answering people. Basically: Be nice
May 7, 2014 at 13:13 comment added Hans Then C'mon. "Brutal" is just saying what it's like. Many people on Stack Overflow are being--very courteously--very rude to newcomers. Should Reblochon sugarcoat that observation?
May 7, 2014 at 13:09 comment added l4mpi -1 for "brutal". If a question has issues, then it should be downvoted and closed, and the problems with it should be expressed as clearly and directly as possible. Offensive comments shouldn't be tolerated, of course, but nobody should have to sugarcoat anything. The fact that someone is new to SO or the internet in general doesn't mean he should be treated any different from established users (with the exception of leaving a comment explaining what he did wrong if he's brand new).
May 7, 2014 at 12:59 comment added Frédéric Hamidi And thank you for your answer, Reblochon. Could you point out specifics about attitude and tone that I could have improved in my handling of that question? I'm especially interested in determining whether or not I could have avoided this situation only by changing a few words in my comments.
May 7, 2014 at 12:54 history answered Reblochon Masque CC BY-SA 3.0