Skip to main content
replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

That's really not what the comment system is meant for.

Comments are, admittedly, second-class citizens; they're temporal, they don't add reputation (although you get enough upvotes in them and you get a few badges), and they've only got a little bit of space to work with. But, the value they provide is that they allow for brief commentary to request clarification of a question, or to point out errors in an answer.

If a user is continually having trouble, perhaps a private chat room would be of more value than adding comments.

I'd give Exit strategies for "chameleon questions"Exit strategies for "chameleon questions" a quick read; questions that have the OP shoveling new code into comments have the same feel to a question that is repeatedly changed to fulfill a single question.

That's really not what the comment system is meant for.

Comments are, admittedly, second-class citizens; they're temporal, they don't add reputation (although you get enough upvotes in them and you get a few badges), and they've only got a little bit of space to work with. But, the value they provide is that they allow for brief commentary to request clarification of a question, or to point out errors in an answer.

If a user is continually having trouble, perhaps a private chat room would be of more value than adding comments.

I'd give Exit strategies for "chameleon questions" a quick read; questions that have the OP shoveling new code into comments have the same feel to a question that is repeatedly changed to fulfill a single question.

That's really not what the comment system is meant for.

Comments are, admittedly, second-class citizens; they're temporal, they don't add reputation (although you get enough upvotes in them and you get a few badges), and they've only got a little bit of space to work with. But, the value they provide is that they allow for brief commentary to request clarification of a question, or to point out errors in an answer.

If a user is continually having trouble, perhaps a private chat room would be of more value than adding comments.

I'd give Exit strategies for "chameleon questions" a quick read; questions that have the OP shoveling new code into comments have the same feel to a question that is repeatedly changed to fulfill a single question.

Source Link
Makoto
  • 106.2k
  • 120
  • 864
  • 1.3k

That's really not what the comment system is meant for.

Comments are, admittedly, second-class citizens; they're temporal, they don't add reputation (although you get enough upvotes in them and you get a few badges), and they've only got a little bit of space to work with. But, the value they provide is that they allow for brief commentary to request clarification of a question, or to point out errors in an answer.

If a user is continually having trouble, perhaps a private chat room would be of more value than adding comments.

I'd give Exit strategies for "chameleon questions" a quick read; questions that have the OP shoveling new code into comments have the same feel to a question that is repeatedly changed to fulfill a single question.