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May 29, 2019 at 15:50 comment added Jess @CodyGray you have yet to respond to the point that the answers to old questions are likely to be objectively wrong and obsolete. In those cases, a new answer that is objectively more correct is not going to be able to beat an answer from 8 years ago vote-wise (and in fact, this is an incredibly frequent point of frustration for me when I'm looking for HTML / Javascript questions and the top 10 answers are all completely non-functional). How do you propose users be made aware of new correct answers in those cases?
May 29, 2019 at 13:59 comment added Hans Passant I use it as a workaround for having lost the right to cast a normal dup vote. Which is in about all of the tags I look at. I used to put "Possible duplicate" in front of it, but decided that was pretty pointless. How that is "promotion" is murky, there is just no fundamental difference that I see with the auto-generated comment from a normal dup vote. Sometimes the OP even comments "that solved my problem", upon which I can vote without risking harassment. That's pretty rare though.
May 29, 2019 at 13:33 comment added Lundin Also, the fact is that people who have domain expertise and who have dug down into one particular topic and written posts about it, are the ones who are the most likely to spot technical inaccuracies, as well as knowing that a dupe exists (since they remember writing one).
May 29, 2019 at 13:27 comment added Lundin In such a situation, it absolutely seems most appropriate to leave a comment. The alternative is to radically change how we moderate questions on SO.
May 29, 2019 at 13:26 comment added Lundin I don't agree. If you find an answer which is incorrect and/or outdated, and you have written a newer correct answer elsewhere, then what are we to do? The incorrect answer might already be heavily up-voted, so casting a down-vote won't do a thing. We can't flag, because the answer is on-topic and answers the question, just technically incorrect. We can't edit it because that would be a major, intrusive edit. We can't dupe hammer the whole thread, because 1) we are partial having written the correct answer in the dupe target 2) there might be other answers to the question that are valuable. ->
May 29, 2019 at 10:53 comment added jpmc26 "that do nothing more than 'promote' or 'advertise' an answer" That is contradicted by one of the example comments. The first one draws attention to the very useful information that the software has been updated in a way that obsoletes the existing, probably popular answer. This might direct users toward an answer very far down in the list (e.g. 10th out of 15) that they might otherwise miss. I don't know if that's enough to justify the existence of the comment, but it's enough to invalidate your argument. And bad arguments are wrong, whether they lead to the correct conclusion or not.
May 29, 2019 at 7:31 comment added Cody Gray Mod I very much disagree with the claim that the system emphasizes comments over answers. Comments are in tiny print compared to answers, and often collapsed. The point has been made that comments of this nature can be highly upvoted as a way of drawing attention to them, but...um...if the comment advertising the answer can get a lot of upvotes, then so can the answer, thus obviating the need for the comment advertising it. This seems obvious to me, so I guess I'm still missing something. Of course, comments cannot be downvoted, so I guess it's easier for a comment to reach a high score.
May 29, 2019 at 7:29 comment added Cody Gray Mod I don't really have time for an extended debate in the comments, but there seems to be a substantial amount of confusion regarding what, precisely, we're discussing here. The problem might be that I'm operating with context others don't have. We're talking about comments posted to the question (not another answer) that do nothing more than "promote" or "advertise" an answer that has been posted by the commenting user to the very same question that they're commenting on. I've updated the question to add this context, because I cannot understand why this is so controversial.
May 29, 2019 at 5:24 comment added jpmc26 @cs95 Could you clarify the title, please? I think most of my comment is still applicable, though. I don't know what the answer is here, but Cody's assertions are just off the mark.
May 29, 2019 at 4:54 comment added cs95 @jpmc26 The issue is with self-promoting comments being posted under the question, not under answers (apparently the latter is fine while the former is considered some vile crime, at least that's the impression this post has given me).
May 29, 2019 at 4:21 comment added jpmc26 "You're saying that users won't take the time to read through all the answers to a question in order to find some buried treasure, but they will take the time to read through all the comments to a question in order to find a treasure map leading them to potentially buried treasure." No, you're saying they might stumble across the comment when they get to the bottom of the answer and be led to some more up to date or correct info. You also hope that the author of the answer might edit their answer to address the concerns the other answer does, or at least point them to the answer that does.
May 29, 2019 at 2:46 comment added Nicol Bolas @CodyGray: "You can even sort answers by "active", in order to find the most recently updated ones, if that's your cup of tea." But you can't make someone sort answers by activity rather than votes. By contrast, if your comment is highly upvoted or there aren't many comments there, all users will always see it before any answers. You can't make them read the comment or follow the link, but it will be the first thing they see after the question. That being said, I don't like it as a general "this is OK" thing, but only because of the possibility of abuse.
May 29, 2019 at 2:23 comment added Cris Luengo “the system is designed to emphasize answers, not comments.“ Not really. The comments are right under the question, above all answers. If you read things top to bottom like I’ve learned doing since childhood, you read the comments to the question before you read any of the answers.
May 29, 2019 at 2:10 comment added cs95 @Cody, so, what I understand from your answer is: 1) it is OK to flag comments that self-advertise because they're essentially "spam and unsolicited self-promotion", and 2) It is OK to advertise your answer under someone else's answer, rather than the question if your answer addresses an issue/inconsistency the answer you're commenting under, has.
May 29, 2019 at 2:00 comment added Cody Gray Mod @Davy Yes, comments that make specific criticisms of an answer are fine, even if they include a link to your own answer. I don't see a problem with that. The link isn't really unsolicited. Those aren't what we're talking about here. They would be posted as comments underneath a particular answer, not as comments to the question.
May 29, 2019 at 1:58 comment added cs95 "Why is your recommendation of your own answer less biased than the sort order?" OK, this is where context matters. You have not specifically addressed the situations in which people add new answers. The cases to consider are 1) current answers are outdated, this is not subjective or biased. 2) current answers are incorrect or do not cover important use/corner cases, this is also not subjective, and 3) your answer is a deep dive into the same topic. This is the only time I would probably refrain from commenting because my bias would come into the picture.
May 29, 2019 at 1:55 comment added Davy M It might be valuable if you were to express your opinion on comments that point out a specific flaw in the answer (such as x is not supported since version y, instead use z as explained in my answer). I could easily see those as either being again unsolicited self promotion, but at the same time, comments are exactly the place to point out errors. It seems the addition of "as explained in my answer" is pushing it from being a good comment to self promotion; hence why I'd like the clarification.
May 29, 2019 at 1:54 comment added Cody Gray Mod Why is your recommendation of your own answer less biased than the sort order?
May 29, 2019 at 1:46 comment added cs95 Thanks for your answer and valuable feedback. To address this point: "but they will take the time to read through all the comments" Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying. Because the first thing that falls in a user's line of sight when they land up on the page is the question and the comments under it. Granted, not every person who comes across the post sees the comments, but at least some (>0) will. I consider that a good thing, because they'd be in a better position to evaluate the answers rather than blindly be influenced by position bias (as I mentioned before).
May 29, 2019 at 1:40 history answered Cody GrayMod CC BY-SA 4.0