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gnat
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The inverse perspective of @Ian Kemp's answer Ian Kemp's answer (from a person positively impacted by you, the experts) below.


  

As a user who predominately asks questions instead of answering, this is terrifying (okay, I may be exaggerating a bit..). But quite honestly, the only reason I am able to be as efficient as I am, and have progressed as much as I have in the past 5 years as a developer are the experts on Stack Overflow. I would be crushed to find that the majority of experts are leaving because of bad user interactions and overzealous(?) moderators deleting comments that are ultimately useful.

As a newbie who relies on StackOverflow Q/A to be #1 Google result for any given programming-related search, I beseech the moderators and those flagging to carefully consider the impact of their actions and their effects on the community. Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange as a whole are my most-frequented sites for development of my own knowledge of the universe, and the sole reason this is possible is because SO/SE attracts knowledgeable people! These are the people who should not be driven away from the site(s)...

Obviously there is a bottom line to keep people visiting and get page views and such, but I wouldn't be an active user if I didn't always find interesting, thought-provoking and helpful information/advice on Stack Exchange. I'm sure I'm not the only one in the asks-and-reads-more-than-answers category of users who rely on knowledgable people like @CodeCaster.

I can't tell you how many times I've come to "oh duh, of course I should have mentioned that or clarified that point" because of someone like you guys dropping a comment. And I never feel upset or annoyed that a comment like that was made, because it helped me improve my question as well as my ability to formulate new ones in the future. My first few questions on SO were absolute crap but I feel that I've come a long way to better express myself and my problem(s) in the Q/A because of the effort you put in to help me with that. I've grown as a person because of you.

So please, flaggers and moderators, consider how you impact the community as a whole when you flag and delete. And experts, please know that there are people like me who are incredibly appreciative of your time and effort spent on crafting beautifully-written and informative answers, as well as time you spend helping the OP clarify and refine their question.


  

And to answer the question... no, don't stop commenting. The behavioral issue is not with you, the commenter - it's the flaggers and people dealing with the flags. I'm not sure how to improve the system to make flagging and moderating more efficient and less prone to human error (I'm not sure that it can be at this point...), but the fact that comments like yours (OP/experts trying to help) get deleted when they clearly shouldn't be is just sad. And it does show lack of conscious on the part of those getting the comments deleted to the broader effect of their actions on the community - not only direct impact to the experts, but to those who rely on their knowledge every day. People need to be more conscious of that in general.

The inverse perspective of @Ian Kemp's answer (from a person positively impacted by you, the experts) below.


 

As a user who predominately asks questions instead of answering, this is terrifying (okay, I may be exaggerating a bit..). But quite honestly, the only reason I am able to be as efficient as I am, and have progressed as much as I have in the past 5 years as a developer are the experts on Stack Overflow. I would be crushed to find that the majority of experts are leaving because of bad user interactions and overzealous(?) moderators deleting comments that are ultimately useful.

As a newbie who relies on StackOverflow Q/A to be #1 Google result for any given programming-related search, I beseech the moderators and those flagging to carefully consider the impact of their actions and their effects on the community. Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange as a whole are my most-frequented sites for development of my own knowledge of the universe, and the sole reason this is possible is because SO/SE attracts knowledgeable people! These are the people who should not be driven away from the site(s)...

Obviously there is a bottom line to keep people visiting and get page views and such, but I wouldn't be an active user if I didn't always find interesting, thought-provoking and helpful information/advice on Stack Exchange. I'm sure I'm not the only one in the asks-and-reads-more-than-answers category of users who rely on knowledgable people like @CodeCaster.

I can't tell you how many times I've come to "oh duh, of course I should have mentioned that or clarified that point" because of someone like you guys dropping a comment. And I never feel upset or annoyed that a comment like that was made, because it helped me improve my question as well as my ability to formulate new ones in the future. My first few questions on SO were absolute crap but I feel that I've come a long way to better express myself and my problem(s) in the Q/A because of the effort you put in to help me with that. I've grown as a person because of you.

So please, flaggers and moderators, consider how you impact the community as a whole when you flag and delete. And experts, please know that there are people like me who are incredibly appreciative of your time and effort spent on crafting beautifully-written and informative answers, as well as time you spend helping the OP clarify and refine their question.


 

And to answer the question... no, don't stop commenting. The behavioral issue is not with you, the commenter - it's the flaggers and people dealing with the flags. I'm not sure how to improve the system to make flagging and moderating more efficient and less prone to human error (I'm not sure that it can be at this point...), but the fact that comments like yours (OP/experts trying to help) get deleted when they clearly shouldn't be is just sad. And it does show lack of conscious on the part of those getting the comments deleted to the broader effect of their actions on the community - not only direct impact to the experts, but to those who rely on their knowledge every day. People need to be more conscious of that in general.

The inverse perspective of Ian Kemp's answer (from a person positively impacted by you, the experts) below.

 

As a user who predominately asks questions instead of answering, this is terrifying (okay, I may be exaggerating a bit..). But quite honestly, the only reason I am able to be as efficient as I am, and have progressed as much as I have in the past 5 years as a developer are the experts on Stack Overflow. I would be crushed to find that the majority of experts are leaving because of bad user interactions and overzealous(?) moderators deleting comments that are ultimately useful.

As a newbie who relies on StackOverflow Q/A to be #1 Google result for any given programming-related search, I beseech the moderators and those flagging to carefully consider the impact of their actions and their effects on the community. Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange as a whole are my most-frequented sites for development of my own knowledge of the universe, and the sole reason this is possible is because SO/SE attracts knowledgeable people! These are the people who should not be driven away from the site(s)...

Obviously there is a bottom line to keep people visiting and get page views and such, but I wouldn't be an active user if I didn't always find interesting, thought-provoking and helpful information/advice on Stack Exchange. I'm sure I'm not the only one in the asks-and-reads-more-than-answers category of users who rely on knowledgable people like @CodeCaster.

I can't tell you how many times I've come to "oh duh, of course I should have mentioned that or clarified that point" because of someone like you guys dropping a comment. And I never feel upset or annoyed that a comment like that was made, because it helped me improve my question as well as my ability to formulate new ones in the future. My first few questions on SO were absolute crap but I feel that I've come a long way to better express myself and my problem(s) in the Q/A because of the effort you put in to help me with that. I've grown as a person because of you.

So please, flaggers and moderators, consider how you impact the community as a whole when you flag and delete. And experts, please know that there are people like me who are incredibly appreciative of your time and effort spent on crafting beautifully-written and informative answers, as well as time you spend helping the OP clarify and refine their question.

 

And to answer the question... no, don't stop commenting. The behavioral issue is not with you, the commenter - it's the flaggers and people dealing with the flags. I'm not sure how to improve the system to make flagging and moderating more efficient and less prone to human error (I'm not sure that it can be at this point...), but the fact that comments like yours (OP/experts trying to help) get deleted when they clearly shouldn't be is just sad. And it does show lack of conscious on the part of those getting the comments deleted to the broader effect of their actions on the community - not only direct impact to the experts, but to those who rely on their knowledge every day. People need to be more conscious of that in general.

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Chris Cirefice
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The inverse perspective of @Ian Kemp's answer (from a person positively impacted by you, the experts) below.


As a user who predominately asks questions instead of answering, this is terrifying (okay, I may be exaggerating a bit..). But quite honestly, the only reason I am able to be as efficient as I am, and have progressed as much as I have in the past 5 years as a developer are the experts on Stack Overflow. I would be crushed to find that the majority of experts are leaving because of bad user interactions and overzealous(?) moderators deleting comments that are ultimately useful.

As a newbie who relies on StackOverflow Q/A to be #1 Google result for any given programming-related search, I beseech the moderators and those flagging to carefully consider the impact of their actions and their effects on the community. Stack Overflow and Stack Exchange as a whole are my most-frequented sites for development of my own knowledge of the universe, and the sole reason this is possible is because SO/SE attracts knowledgeable people! These are the people who should not be driven away from the site(s)...

Obviously there is a bottom line to keep people visiting and get page views and such, but I wouldn't be an active user if I didn't always find interesting, thought-provoking and helpful information/advice on Stack Exchange. I'm sure I'm not the only one in the asks-and-reads-more-than-answers category of users who rely on knowledgable people like @CodeCaster.

I can't tell you how many times I've come to "oh duh, of course I should have mentioned that or clarified that point" because of someone like you guys dropping a comment. And I never feel upset or annoyed that a comment like that was made, because it helped me improve my question as well as my ability to formulate new ones in the future. My first few questions on SO were absolute crap but I feel that I've come a long way to better express myself and my problem(s) in the Q/A because of the effort you put in to help me with that. I've grown as a person because of you.

So please, flaggers and moderators, consider how you impact the community as a whole when you flag and delete. And experts, please know that there are people like me who are incredibly appreciative of your time and effort spent on crafting beautifully-written and informative answers, as well as time you spend helping the OP clarify and refine their question.


And to answer the question... no, don't stop commenting. The behavioral issue is not with you, the commenter - it's the flaggers and people dealing with the flags. I'm not sure how to improve the system to make flagging and moderating more efficient and less prone to human error (I'm not sure that it can be at this point...), but the fact that comments like yours (OP/experts trying to help) get deleted when they clearly shouldn't be is just sad. And it does show lack of conscious on the part of those getting the comments deleted to the broader effect of their actions on the community - not only direct impact to the experts, but to those who rely on their knowledge every day. People need to be more conscious of that in general.