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Fixed misuse of rare words
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Nathan Tuggy
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Well, let's categorize some different sets of comments, and see where No Longer Needed differs from Not Relevant.

  1. Requests to improve the post, which have already been acted upon.

    A comment based on the state of a post, when the post is no longer in that state, is Not Relevant to that post. And obviously, such comments are No Longer Needed.

  2. Requests to improve the post, which the OP has clearly read and chosen not to act on.

    Since the OP has deigned not deigned to oblige the person making the comment, such comments are No Longer Needed. Even if the commenter (or other commenters) believe that such changes are necessary, the OP said no. Harassing the user won't help anyone. Similarly, if the OP has decided not to make those changes, then the OP considers those requests to be Not Relevant to their post.

    In those cases, it's best to downvote/close as appropriate, and move on.

  3. Pointing out side-issues in the post.

    These would be things like asking why a question is approaching a problem in a certain way. Why are you using version X of the API instead of version Y. And so forth. This even applies to "XY Problem" comments.

    These comments are usually not No Longer Needed. However, they are almost certainly Not Relevant to the post, since the post is the way it is. If someone asks a question about X, but their real unstated problem is Y and there's a better way to handle Y than X, "XY Problem" comments can't really help improve that question. Why? Because the question is about X; if the OP changes it, then they've asked a completely new question, and we generally frown on massive in-situ changes to the direction of a question.

    Of course, the question is this: do we still want those comments? They do after all contain significant informational content for users. Particularly "XY Problem" issues. But at the same time, these more informational comments rarely improve the question, since they're often either discussing something that can't be changed (the OP didn't choose to use version X instead of version Y) or asking to have the question be radically altered.

    So it's not clear to me whether it's a good thing to remove these comments.

Well, let's categorize some different sets of comments, and see where No Longer Needed differs from Not Relevant.

  1. Requests to improve the post, which have already been acted upon.

    A comment based on the state of a post, when the post is no longer in that state, is Not Relevant to that post. And obviously, such comments are No Longer Needed.

  2. Requests to improve the post, which the OP has clearly read and chosen not to act on.

    Since the OP has deigned not to oblige the person making the comment, such comments are No Longer Needed. Even if the commenter (or other commenters) believe that such changes are necessary, the OP said no. Harassing the user won't help anyone. Similarly, if the OP has decided not to make those changes, then the OP considers those requests to be Not Relevant to their post.

    In those cases, it's best to downvote/close as appropriate, and move on.

  3. Pointing out side-issues in the post.

    These would be things like asking why a question is approaching a problem in a certain way. Why are you using version X of the API instead of version Y. And so forth. This even applies to "XY Problem" comments.

    These comments are usually not No Longer Needed. However, they are almost certainly Not Relevant to the post, since the post is the way it is. If someone asks a question about X, but their real unstated problem is Y and there's a better way to handle Y than X, "XY Problem" comments can't really help improve that question. Why? Because the question is about X; if the OP changes it, then they've asked a completely new question, and we generally frown on massive in-situ changes to the direction of a question.

    Of course, the question is this: do we still want those comments? They do after all contain significant informational content for users. Particularly "XY Problem" issues. But at the same time, these more informational comments rarely improve the question, since they're often either discussing something that can't be changed (the OP didn't choose to use version X instead of version Y) or asking to have the question be radically altered.

    So it's not clear to me whether it's a good thing to remove these comments.

Well, let's categorize some different sets of comments, and see where No Longer Needed differs from Not Relevant.

  1. Requests to improve the post, which have already been acted upon.

    A comment based on the state of a post, when the post is no longer in that state, is Not Relevant to that post. And obviously, such comments are No Longer Needed.

  2. Requests to improve the post, which the OP has clearly read and chosen not to act on.

    Since the OP has not deigned to oblige the person making the comment, such comments are No Longer Needed. Even if the commenter (or other commenters) believe that such changes are necessary, the OP said no. Harassing the user won't help anyone. Similarly, if the OP has decided not to make those changes, then the OP considers those requests to be Not Relevant to their post.

    In those cases, it's best to downvote/close as appropriate, and move on.

  3. Pointing out side-issues in the post.

    These would be things like asking why a question is approaching a problem in a certain way. Why are you using version X of the API instead of version Y. And so forth. This even applies to "XY Problem" comments.

    These comments are usually not No Longer Needed. However, they are almost certainly Not Relevant to the post, since the post is the way it is. If someone asks a question about X, but their real unstated problem is Y and there's a better way to handle Y than X, "XY Problem" comments can't really help improve that question. Why? Because the question is about X; if the OP changes it, then they've asked a completely new question, and we generally frown on massive in-situ changes to the direction of a question.

    Of course, the question is this: do we still want those comments? They do after all contain significant informational content for users. Particularly "XY Problem" issues. But at the same time, these more informational comments rarely improve the question, since they're often either discussing something that can't be changed (the OP didn't choose to use version X instead of version Y) or asking to have the question be radically altered.

    So it's not clear to me whether it's a good thing to remove these comments.

deleted 1 character in body
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Nicol Bolas
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Well, let's categorize some different sets of comments, and see where No Longer Needed differs from Not Relevant.

  1. Requests to improve the post, which have already been acted upon.

    A comment based on the state of a post, when the post is no longer in that state, is Not Relevant to that post. And obviously, such comments are No Longer Needed.

  2. Requests to improve the post, which the OP has clearly read and chosen not to act on.

    Since the OP has deigned not to oblige the person making the comment, such comments are No Longer Needed. Even if the commenter (or other commenters) believe that such changes are necessary, the OP said no. Harassing the user won't help anyone. Similarly, if the OP has decided not to make those changes, then the OP considers those requests to be Not Relevant to their post.

    In those cases, it's best to downvote/close as appropriate, and move on.

  3. Pointing out side-issues in the post.

    These would be things like asking why a question is approaching a problem in a certain way. Why are you using version X of the API instead of version Y. And so forth. This even applies to "XY Problem" comments.

    These comments are usually not No Longer Needed. However, they are almost certainly Not Relevant to the post, since the post is the way it is. If someone asks a question about X, but their real unstated problem is Y and there's a better way to handle Y than X, "XY Problem" comments can't really help improve that question. Why? Because the question is about X; if the OP changes it, then they've asked a completely new question, and we generally frown on massive in-situ changes to the direction of a question.

    Of course, the question is this: do we still want those comments? They do after all contain significant informational content for users. Particularly "XY Problem" issues. But at the same time, these more informational comments rarely improve the question, since they're often either discussing something that can't be changed (the OP didn't choose to use version X instead of version Y) or asking to have the question be radically altered.

    So it's not clear to me whether it's a good thing to remove these questionscomments.

Well, let's categorize some different sets of comments, and see where No Longer Needed differs from Not Relevant.

  1. Requests to improve the post, which have already been acted upon.

    A comment based on the state of a post, when the post is no longer in that state, is Not Relevant to that post. And obviously, such comments are No Longer Needed.

  2. Requests to improve the post, which the OP has clearly read and chosen not to act on.

    Since the OP has deigned not to oblige the person making the comment, such comments are No Longer Needed. Even if the commenter (or other commenters) believe that such changes are necessary, the OP said no. Harassing the user won't help anyone. Similarly, if the OP has decided not to make those changes, then the OP considers those requests to be Not Relevant to their post.

    In those cases, it's best to downvote/close as appropriate, and move on.

  3. Pointing out side-issues in the post.

    These would be things like asking why a question is approaching a problem in a certain way. Why are you using version X of the API instead of version Y. And so forth. This even applies to "XY Problem" comments.

    These comments are usually not No Longer Needed. However, they are almost certainly Not Relevant to the post, since the post is the way it is. If someone asks a question about X, but their real unstated problem is Y and there's a better way to handle Y than X, "XY Problem" comments can't really help improve that question. Why? Because the question is about X; if the OP changes it, then they've asked a completely new question, and we generally frown on massive in-situ changes to the direction of a question.

    Of course, the question is this: do we still want those comments? They do after all contain significant informational content for users. Particularly "XY Problem" issues. But at the same time, these more informational comments rarely improve the question, since they're often either discussing something that can't be changed (the OP didn't choose to use version X instead of version Y) or asking to have the question be radically altered.

    So it's not clear to me whether it's a good thing to remove these questions.

Well, let's categorize some different sets of comments, and see where No Longer Needed differs from Not Relevant.

  1. Requests to improve the post, which have already been acted upon.

    A comment based on the state of a post, when the post is no longer in that state, is Not Relevant to that post. And obviously, such comments are No Longer Needed.

  2. Requests to improve the post, which the OP has clearly read and chosen not to act on.

    Since the OP has deigned not to oblige the person making the comment, such comments are No Longer Needed. Even if the commenter (or other commenters) believe that such changes are necessary, the OP said no. Harassing the user won't help anyone. Similarly, if the OP has decided not to make those changes, then the OP considers those requests to be Not Relevant to their post.

    In those cases, it's best to downvote/close as appropriate, and move on.

  3. Pointing out side-issues in the post.

    These would be things like asking why a question is approaching a problem in a certain way. Why are you using version X of the API instead of version Y. And so forth. This even applies to "XY Problem" comments.

    These comments are usually not No Longer Needed. However, they are almost certainly Not Relevant to the post, since the post is the way it is. If someone asks a question about X, but their real unstated problem is Y and there's a better way to handle Y than X, "XY Problem" comments can't really help improve that question. Why? Because the question is about X; if the OP changes it, then they've asked a completely new question, and we generally frown on massive in-situ changes to the direction of a question.

    Of course, the question is this: do we still want those comments? They do after all contain significant informational content for users. Particularly "XY Problem" issues. But at the same time, these more informational comments rarely improve the question, since they're often either discussing something that can't be changed (the OP didn't choose to use version X instead of version Y) or asking to have the question be radically altered.

    So it's not clear to me whether it's a good thing to remove these comments.

Source Link
Nicol Bolas
  • 471.9k
  • 61
  • 186
  • 279

Well, let's categorize some different sets of comments, and see where No Longer Needed differs from Not Relevant.

  1. Requests to improve the post, which have already been acted upon.

    A comment based on the state of a post, when the post is no longer in that state, is Not Relevant to that post. And obviously, such comments are No Longer Needed.

  2. Requests to improve the post, which the OP has clearly read and chosen not to act on.

    Since the OP has deigned not to oblige the person making the comment, such comments are No Longer Needed. Even if the commenter (or other commenters) believe that such changes are necessary, the OP said no. Harassing the user won't help anyone. Similarly, if the OP has decided not to make those changes, then the OP considers those requests to be Not Relevant to their post.

    In those cases, it's best to downvote/close as appropriate, and move on.

  3. Pointing out side-issues in the post.

    These would be things like asking why a question is approaching a problem in a certain way. Why are you using version X of the API instead of version Y. And so forth. This even applies to "XY Problem" comments.

    These comments are usually not No Longer Needed. However, they are almost certainly Not Relevant to the post, since the post is the way it is. If someone asks a question about X, but their real unstated problem is Y and there's a better way to handle Y than X, "XY Problem" comments can't really help improve that question. Why? Because the question is about X; if the OP changes it, then they've asked a completely new question, and we generally frown on massive in-situ changes to the direction of a question.

    Of course, the question is this: do we still want those comments? They do after all contain significant informational content for users. Particularly "XY Problem" issues. But at the same time, these more informational comments rarely improve the question, since they're often either discussing something that can't be changed (the OP didn't choose to use version X instead of version Y) or asking to have the question be radically altered.

    So it's not clear to me whether it's a good thing to remove these questions.