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May 10, 2016 at 14:47 comment added Pekka @O.M.Y. comments that are completely unrelated to the question asked can be flagged as "too chatty" and have a high chance of being removed. As to comments that simply disagree with the OP.... they can be valuable. Very, very often, askers need to be told that they are completely wrong. It's happened to myself, and it's one of the most educational experiences you can have here. We already disallow answers that don't answer the question; adding similar restrictions to the comments system would be super counterproductive.
May 10, 2016 at 14:37 comment added O.M.Y. "What exactly do you want to do about it?" -- ah now THAT is a good question! For now I do not know the answer but I wish that the question would be well discussed and options proposed. On a gut level (heat-of-the-moment to use your phrase) I think maybe having another sub-option for "disregards the question asked" under the flag feature could be one solution but we also would need some consensus on when to use that flag. Perhaps instead of suppressing comments flagged with this sub-option, they could be displayed in a colored background to show them as being inappropriate answers.
May 10, 2016 at 14:27 comment added Pekka Maybe. Yet, most "solutions" to the problem brought up in the heat of the moment by people who had just had a bad experience on the site generally tend to be awful. There is no easy fix to the fact that some individuals are curt or even rude (even when asking a fair question like whether the OP misheard something), or appear rude through the Internet where you don't have voice, facial expressions, etc. Generally, it also seems that highly technically talented people aren't always the most socially talented. It's a much discussed issue here on Meta. What exactly do you want to do about it?
May 10, 2016 at 14:19 comment added O.M.Y. I also asked a meta question which led to this meta as a related/duplicate of mine. From there it seems there are a chain of related/duplicate questions on this issue going back years. The bottom line is it is rude & unprofessional to dismiss an actual question and tell a person they do not know what they are asking. There are many examples. Case-in-point: Today on our EL&U forum an OP was told point blank "the phrase ... simply doesn't exist ... you misheard". This is a long-term and toxic (sub)culture in SO (& SE in general).
May 10, 2016 at 14:05 comment added Pekka That's a common sentiment among folks who had a bad experience on Stack Overflow, and it's understandable. Enforcing the things you want would not likely be a good idea for the place as a whole, though. We already have fine tools in place for ensuring both "answering the question" and respectful discourse. Your question was a very, very borderline case in a system with a very narrow scope... maybe the real answer here is that that kind of question just doesn't work well here. I've had plenty of questions in my career that I refrained from asking here for the same reason, and researched myself.
May 10, 2016 at 14:01 comment added O.M.Y. My point being that some users will not carefully read the question, or if they do they will opt to ignore all efforts to inform them of any paradigm for the answer before and after the question is asked. Is your answer the best answer, probably under the current situation it is but it is not a solution to the root problem that we have no adequate means to correct the behavior of SO users who (as the OP said) provide patronizing-answers-which-assume-youre-asking-the-wrong-question. We need a way to enforce the idea of answer the question that was asked and show some modicum of respect.
May 10, 2016 at 13:49 comment added Pekka Your point being?
May 10, 2016 at 13:16 comment added O.M.Y. I know this Q/A is old but I wanted to add my two cents in rejection of this answer. I wrote a question that was much like the OP asking for help optimizing an algorithm. I listed 5 steps of a process, then stated clearly I only wanted help with steps #2 through #4 which were CPU intensive. Despite this I got answers focusing on steps #1 & #5 which dealt with pre/post file I/O. Time and again I repeated in comments I needed help with the CPU steps and yet nearly everyone focused on the file I/O, some going so far as to tell me I was wasting time asking the question.
Jan 24, 2015 at 14:38 vote accept ideasman42
Jan 24, 2015 at 10:46 history answered Pekka CC BY-SA 3.0