When this question was first posted, it was almost immediately upvoted, which shocked me because a question requires at least a ?
. I posted a comment asking why someone would upvote it because there was no question.
Note: all of my comments on the "question" and one of the answers have been deleted.
Here is a synopsis of what subsequently transpired:
The OP also self-answered their post with a code-only answer that was almost immediately upvoted as well. I posted a comment on that answer stating that code-only answers are generally considered to be poor quality.
Later, the OP leaves a comment on the "code-only" answer asking if I meant to leave that comment on a different post because it wasn't a code-only answer. What the OP had failed to mention is that they had edited their answer (Revision 2) and changed it from a code-only answer (Revision 1). The OP hadn't added any context / non-code words until about a day after I left that comment. The OP then goes on to state that I'm encouraging people to downvote answers and that's toxic. I didn't encourage anyone to downvote. So, not only did they accuse me of an unwarranted comment about code-only, they then also said I was encouraging people to downvote. Both of these statements are completely false.
Then, another user interpreted that OP's comments on the previously code-only answer as proof that I'm being "derogatory". That user failed to consider that the OP had edited their answer and changed it from code-only and then made a comment making it seems like I was making an unwarranted comment about code-only. That user also took issue with the fact that I asked why someone would upvote the question, stating that is not helpful to direct comments at the upvoting action. I responded to that comment and said it was helpful in the sense that we should be helping to maintain the quality of the SO question repository.
Question
Why were my comments on the "question" removed, but the other user's comments that directly relate to my comments were left, with me still tagged?
It leaves a one-sided story, which is not an accurate accounting of what happened.