Timeline for Why were my comments deleted but not the comments I'm tagged in and responding to?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
33 events
when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
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Jul 11 at 6:33 | history | edited | cigien | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
rewrite "edit" to make the question flow more naturally
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Jul 11 at 2:42 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | "I've also added text" refers to the edit. "it is not only code. It includes usage and sample output." refers to the original answer. I don't think you saw that comment, since on Jun 25 it was deleted and reposted in a different (and slightly less clear) version, which you replied to on Jun 25. And yes, I understand that you weren't trying to misrepresent it. I didn't mean to imply malicious intent; perhaps I should have said that the description (which didn't quote the comments but instead described them uncharitably) was misleading. | |
Jul 11 at 2:19 | comment | added | devlin carnate | @RyanM - just to clarify, that comment was made just before or after the OP edited their answer, no? So it's referring to their edit and not the original answer? I'm asking because I'm almost certain I didn't see any comments on that answer when I made my "code-only" comment. And yes, I can understand the perspective that the output is not code. I wasn't trying to mis-state what happened. | |
Jul 11 at 1:25 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | @BoogaRoo I agree that that is the disconnect. Whether it is code-only or not or is not is debatable; I've seen code-only answers that are far worse than that, due to having only code (often a lot of code, most of it irrelevant to the technique being used) without output. IMHO, it's still equally code-only now; there's still no explanation of the technique. But, at least, the OP's point was that they considered the original revision to not be code-only. A comment visible from Jun 21-25 said, in part, "it is not only code. It includes usage and sample output. I've also added text." | |
Jul 10 at 23:40 | comment | added | Booga Roo | @RyanM I believe the disconnect here may be in what is considered "code only." I would also call that a code only answer as it contains no prose of any kind. | |
Jul 10 at 21:47 | answer | added | mklement0 | timeline score: -3 | |
Jul 10 at 21:45 | comment | added | devlin carnate | @RyanM If you consider that to be a misrepresentation, it wasn't my intention. Earlier today I added a link & screenshot of that revision to my original question above, so it's there for everyone to see. I'm not trying to hide or misrepresent what transpired. | |
Jul 10 at 21:31 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | The statement being made here is that this revision, while containing only a code-block, does not contain only code; it also contains the output of said code. | |
Jul 10 at 20:51 | comment | added | devlin carnate | @KevinB I know that now, TY. | |
Jul 10 at 20:51 | comment | added | Kevin B | code only or not "why is this upvoted" is never a useful comment. The criticism can be provided without it. | |
Jul 10 at 20:49 | comment | added | devlin carnate | @RyanM - when I left my comment on the answer, it was a code-only answer and there were no other comments (at least, to my recollection there were not). I'm not sure what's misrepresented? I never encouraged anyone to downvote. It should not have been upvoted. | |
Jul 10 at 20:42 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | @devlincarnate That's the exact same link I posted... | |
Jul 10 at 16:24 | history | edited | devlin carnate | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
added 435 characters in body
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Jul 10 at 16:19 | history | edited | devlin carnate | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
added 435 characters in body
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Jul 10 at 16:15 | vote | accept | devlin carnate | ||
Jul 10 at 15:00 | comment | added | devlin carnate | @Gimby - in the future I will just flag comments like this, instead of responding to them. TY. | |
Jul 10 at 14:59 | comment | added | devlin carnate | @RyanM - It was code only. The OP has two answers posted. This is what the answer I commented on looked like when I left the comment. The edit in which the OP added some words other than the code was about a day after I left the comment. | |
Jul 10 at 10:26 | comment | added | Gimby | "It leaves a one-sided story, which is not an accurate accounting of what happened." - for one... comments are not meant to tell a story. It is a cascaded result of comments being posted which should not have been posted to begin with, so "it's a mess". It is understandable to use comments like this because there is no dedicated site feature to request feedback that has nothing to do with the post itself. But the fact that this feature does not exist... is also a hint that maybe you're not supposed to. For the future: meta, not comments. | |
Jul 10 at 5:44 | history | became hot meta post | |||
Jul 10 at 0:45 | comment | added | Ryan M Mod | You're misrepresenting the situation on the answer. The OP's comment explaining why it's not code-only said "This answer provides a usage example with sample output.", which was true of the first revision. They then added text besides that in an edit (as they stated in the comment). Also, while you did not quite advise people to downvote, what you said was still inappropriately telling people how to vote: "To whomever upvoted this answer: Code-only answers are considered to be of poor quality. Please don't upvote answers that are poor quality." | |
Jul 10 at 0:40 | comment | added | Security Hound | I also find a comment asking about downvotes to be self destructive and not helpful. So I am not a fan of either type of comments, even though I have found myself, asking why perfectly valid questions of mine being downvoted. Questions which I took great care to describe, and self answer. Knowing my question has been seen by others without resolution. | |
Jul 10 at 0:31 | comment | added | Security Hound | A comment that asks why a question was upvoted just seems unwelcoming, if you found the question unhelpful, I would have just downvoted the question | |
Jul 9 at 21:07 | comment | added | VLAZ | "it was almost immediately upvoted, which shocked me" it was first upvoted (at 2024-06-20 22:50:34Z) nine minutes after posting (at 2024-06-20 22:41:24Z). That's not really "almost immediately" in terms of SO. Well enough time to read the question and a self-answer. Anything over a minute or two should not be suspicious by itself. | |
Jul 9 at 20:29 | answer | added | Karl Knechtel | timeline score: 19 | |
Jul 9 at 19:37 | comment | added | President James K. Polk | If someone flags a comment, the easiest thing is to read just that comment and make a decision. The ideal would be for the mod to read the entire thread, but workloads being what they are, sometimes expediency triumphs over the ideal. | |
Jul 9 at 19:31 | comment | added | Kevin B | It's been covered before on meta a few times, but IIRC it's because mod tools suck. | |
Jul 9 at 19:29 | comment | added | devlin carnate | @cafce25 - It's not specific to this case. The general question applies: why would only one side of a conversation be deleted and not also the comments that tag and make reference to the deleted comments? However, I see from KevinB's comment that the pathway to have the orphaned comments deleted is to flag them as "no longer needed" | |
Jul 9 at 19:26 | history | edited | cafce25 |
edited tags
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Jul 9 at 19:24 | comment | added | devlin carnate | @KevinB TY. I didn't realize flagging as "no longer needed" was the action I should take. | |
Jul 9 at 19:22 | comment | added | cafce25 | Are you asking about this specific instance or the general case why sometimes only some comments of a conversation are removed? | |
Jul 9 at 19:20 | comment | added | Kevin B | i mean... "why is this upvoted" is just as likely to be deleted as "why is this downvoted"... if not moreso. It's needless meta commentary that isn't there to improve the post. I'd assume responses weren't deleted because they weren't flagged as no longer needed. | |
Jul 9 at 19:19 | history | edited | devlin carnate | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
deleted 75 characters in body
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Jul 9 at 19:12 | history | asked | devlin carnate | CC BY-SA 4.0 |