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1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

Possible solutions

There are a few things that could be done to solve this problem. One would be to extend the limit, but that wouldn't really help anything. It would just decrease the frequency of the problem, rather than solving it. Another solution would be to automatically hide the text that exceeds 600 characters in a comment and have a "Show more" link for the comments, similar to the "Show X more comments" link. Another, possibly more drastic solution would be to remove the limit altogether.

Personally I think that the best option would be to collapse long comments, but I am interested in your opinions.



After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

Possible solutions

There are a few things that could be done to solve this problem. One would be to extend the limit, but that wouldn't really help anything. It would just decrease the frequency of the problem, rather than solving it. Another solution would be to automatically hide the text that exceeds 600 characters in a comment and have a "Show more" link for the comments, similar to the "Show X more comments" link. Another, possibly more drastic solution would be to remove the limit altogether.

Personally I think that the best option would be to collapse long comments, but I am interested in your opinions.



After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

Possible solutions

There are a few things that could be done to solve this problem. One would be to extend the limit, but that wouldn't really help anything. It would just decrease the frequency of the problem, rather than solving it. Another solution would be to automatically hide the text that exceeds 600 characters in a comment and have a "Show more" link for the comments, similar to the "Show X more comments" link. Another, possibly more drastic solution would be to remove the limit altogether.

Personally I think that the best option would be to collapse long comments, but I am interested in your opinions.

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After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

Possible solutions

There are a few things that could be done to solve this problem. One would be to extend the limit, but that wouldn't really help anything. It would just decrease the frequency of the problem, rather than solving it. Another solution would be to automatically hide the text that exceeds 600 characters in a comment and have a "Show more" link for the comments, similar to the "Show X more comments" link. Another, possibly more drastic solution would be to remove the limit altogether.

Personally I think that the best option would be to collapse long comments, but I am interested in your opinions.



After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

Possible solutions

There are a few things that could be done to solve this problem. One would be to extend the limit, but that wouldn't really help anything. It would just decrease the frequency of the problem, rather than solving it. Another solution would be to automatically hide the text that exceeds 600 characters in a comment and have a "Show more" link for the comments, similar to the "Show X more comments" link. Another, possibly more drastic solution would be to remove the limit altogether.

Personally I think that the best option would be to collapse long comments, but I am interested in your opinions.

1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

Possible solutions

There are a few things that could be done to solve this problem. One would be to extend the limit, but that wouldn't really help anything. It would just decrease the frequency of the problem, rather than solving it. Another solution would be to automatically hide the text that exceeds 600 characters in a comment and have a "Show more" link for the comments, similar to the "Show X more comments" link. Another, possibly more drastic solution would be to remove the limit altogether.

Personally I think that the best option would be to collapse long comments, but I am interested in your opinions.



After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

added 629 characters in body
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After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

Possible solutions

There are a few things that could be done to solve this problem. One would be to extend the limit, but that wouldn't really help anything. It would just decrease the frequency of the problem, rather than solving it. Another solution would be to automatically hide the text that exceeds 600 characters in a comment and have a "Show more" link for the comments, similar to the "Show X more comments" link. Another, possibly more drastic solution would be to remove the limit altogether.

Personally I think that the best option would be to collapse long comments, but I am interested in your opinions.

After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

After 15 downvotes, I decided it was time for an edit.

I realized that when writing argumentatively, English is more useful when used as an "imperative" language, rather than a "declarative" one. So rather than just explaining my conclusion, I am going to go in-depth into the process I used to arrive at that conclusion (how rather than what, so to speak).

1. It diagnoses most problems incorrectly

Here are a few situations that I thought of where a comment exceeding 600 characters is likely:

  1. A user is answering a question in a comment
  2. A user is asking a question in a comment
  3. A user is explaining why they think a question or answer is incorrect or could use clarification, i.e., and edit.

Consider the first two items on that list. The solution to the first one is to post an answer instead of a comment. Similarly, the solution to the second one is to post a question. But that's not what the message "Too long by X characters" indicates. It indicates that the solution to both of those problems is to make the comment shorter.

But surely it diagnoses the third item correctly, right? Wrong. And that brings me to the second section:

2. It doesn't accomplish its intended purpose

To the best of my belief, the purpose of the character limit is to reduce clutter and improve the readability of comments.

So maybe the solution for a legitimate comment that is too long is to make it shorter. But that's not what most people will do when they see the message "Too long by X characters". Most people will just split the comment into two or even more comments. So rather than contributing to the solution and the end goal of less clutter, the character limit actually contributes to the problem by unintentionally encouraging users to post two comments instead of one!

Possible solutions

There are a few things that could be done to solve this problem. One would be to extend the limit, but that wouldn't really help anything. It would just decrease the frequency of the problem, rather than solving it. Another solution would be to automatically hide the text that exceeds 600 characters in a comment and have a "Show more" link for the comments, similar to the "Show X more comments" link. Another, possibly more drastic solution would be to remove the limit altogether.

Personally I think that the best option would be to collapse long comments, but I am interested in your opinions.

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