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user3956566
user3956566

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments (which is fair) about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments (which is fair) about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

added 2 characters in body
Source Link
user3956566
user3956566

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

deleted 1 character in body
Source Link
user3956566
user3956566

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

Conflict of interest

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

Conflict of interest

There seems to be some upset over my comments about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

TLDR
Comments are intended to be transient, if the comment has reached it's intended audience, it's no longer needed.

No longer needed

I handled the flag to the comment.

It was "no longer needed". All things weighed, how long the comment was there, I thought it was reasonable to delete the comment.

As in this answer:

It was flagged by someone as obsolete. I say someone because we can't see who flagged comments. A moderator reviewed the flag and deleted the comment. The comment was around for about 5 hours before being deleted, so it is entirely possible that the OP saw it making it, in fact, obsolete.

In this case the comment was around for over 8 hours.

The comment is offering a criticism of the answer.

The comment author states:

i just want to inform that user that there is mistake in his answer

As for the comment and it's usefulness. The comment is showing a basic misunderstanding of the answer. The answer (paraphrasing) is stating that requestOptions does not need to be explicitly imported, as it's imported within the larger package of the Glide App class.

The comment doesn't really make sense. It's avoiding the remainder of the answer.

So let's assume the author of the answer read the comment and didn't agree with the comment, how long do we keep the comment around? Who was the intended audience of the comment? By the commenters own words, the author of the answer. The comment has become noise under the post.

Do leave critical feedback, but put important stuff into posts

To be clear I'm not saying don't leave critical feedback under posts. I am saying, unless the comment has pertinent information to the post that is required for future readers (the intended audience), it's unreasonable to expect it to be permanent.

The other issue, comments are supposed to be transient, if there is something of value that needs to be kept on the site, post it into an answer, either as an edit to an existing answer, or a new answer explaining the addition information.

Community concerns

There seems to be some upset over my comments about conflict of interest and upon examination of how I handle flags, the author of the comment is irrelevant. The comment is either useful or is not or no longer useful, regardless of the author.

In terms of mods handling comments, to give you an idea, the mods have deleted in excess of 20,000 comments this month alone. So as Jon said:

We generally don't scrutinise some comment flags too hard ...

Source Link
user3956566
user3956566
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