Comments constituting meta commentary are always subject to deletion.
- Leaving part of a conversation behind is unfortunate, but seemingly an accidental byproduct of the moderating tools making it hard to see comments in context, as noted.
Leaving part of a conversation behind is unfortunate, but seemingly an accidental byproduct of the moderating tools making it hard to see comments in context, as noted.
If you come across such fragments, simply flag them as "No longer needed".
- Leaving part of a conversation behind is unfortunate, but seemingly an accidental byproduct of the moderating tools making it hard to see comments in context, as noted.
All your comments on the linked post were meta commentary, and two of them were inappropriate:
To quote part of Ryan M's comment on this other answer here:
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."
The other inappropriate one was left on the question post (I kept a copy):
"To whomever upvoted this: there isn't even a question in the post. How can that be considered a good question :D :D :D"
To me, this adds a derogatory quality to the inappropriate advice; while I no longer have my original response, here's what I said in (a since moderator-deleted) response to your objecting to my characterizing your comment as derogatory:
If you don't like the word derogatory, let's frame it in terms of whether your comments are helpful: Instead of encouraging posters to fix their questions or answers with constructive feedback, you're focusing on the voting behavior of other users, while talking about the poster rather than to them, in what is - to me, yes, but if I were to guess, also to others - a condescending tone.
That there may or may not have been evasion in meta commentary on the part of the linked post's OP with respect to when an edit to one of their answers occurred and whether your code-only criticism was therefore justified is ultimately immaterial:
- They did rectify the problem by adding a (terse) verbal explanation, and doing so made the comments exchange - including your criticism - obsolete.
The quality of the linked post's question and answers are really incidental to your question, but for the record:
Unquestionably, the original wording of the question post and the simultaneously posted self-answer were suboptimal - these problems have since been corrected.
In short: The linked post is a self-answered question aimed at sharing a useful simplification technique with others, and, to users familiar with PowerShell, i.e. the target audience, I suspect that both what the implied question was and what the value of the code-only self-answer was were obvious from the get-go; it is to be hoped that the subsequent edits made that clearer.
Sadly, it seems that the Meta effect has struck again, as suggested by the timing of the majority of the (to me unwarranted) down-votes on the linked question.