Very much related to: Question with no answers, but issue solved in the comments (or extended in chat)
It's my understanding that the purpose of Stack Overflow to create a universe of questions AND ANSWERS so that a question can be asked and answered once, then searched forever. This, at least, is how I used Stack Overflow even before I joined to help with the answering and is the premise of my question.
How should I deal with following behind users who continually provide answers in the comments?
Robert Harvey's excellent answer in the linked question above is that one can copy the comment that answers the OP's question into an actual answer and mark it as community wiki. Then at least if the OP doesn't accept the answer, the community can vote it up. This is great for coming across one or two questions where the OP finds one of the comments to be sufficient to solve his problem.
However, what about users who continually answer in the comments? The common theme I've noticed is that many of the questions are usually "Why doesn't my code work?" that are answered with a simple "Because you forgot/omitted/mistyped X". I can copy comments into answers at a pretty good clip, but it gets tiring real fast, especially since copying and pasting from comments removes formatting, which I then have to reinsert.
The bottom line is that this leaves a lot of "Unanswered" questions: bad for people searching for an answer to the same question ("No answers? Guess I'll have to look somewhere else..."); bad for myself and other answerers because they must spend wasted time sifting through questions which have no answers, only to realize they have already been answered; and presumably bad for the community because they negatively impact answer statistics.
Please note, this is not a "but where are my rep points???" question. I'm just a tad peeved that one of every two unanswered questions I open turn out to be "answered" by the same two or three users in the comments and I want to know the official, most correct, best answer on how it should be addressed.
Update per Robert Harvey's Question
Here is an example of the kind of question/comment I'm talking about: ReDim Preserve "Subscript Out of Range"
But then I run across questions like this: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23399298/inconsistent-run-time-error-91-with-userforms-in-excel-2013 There are extensive comments, and in an Stack Overflow universe where questions are often enough answered in the comments, it's not immediately clear whether I should spend my time reading the comments and familiarizing myself with the issue, or whether some rogue comment has already answered the OP's question.
I think, based on the feedback I've gotten so far, voting to close might be the best way for me to contribute to the cleanup. Here are my thoughts (for what it's worth) on the solutions raised so far:
- Downvote: This could leave new Stack Overflow users with a bad taste in their mouth and give a bad impression of Stack Overflow to the larger Internet community. It may be apparent to me that their code was incorrect in an obvious way, but most of the questions I see in this category seem to be honest mistakes.
- Repost the Comment as an Answer: I don't want the reputation points, and I don't think the practice is worth encouraging.
- Repost the Comment as an Answer Community Wiki: I'm sure this is a fantastic solution for archiving those long comment discussions that lead to an answer, especially when the OP or original commenter are no longer available to do so themselves. However it doesn't address those quickie one-off comment answers to questions which are simple enough to warrant them.
- Vote to Close: This sounds like the best option for the majority of the questions I'm referring to, as described above. They tend to be syntactic mistakes in code, questions which can be answered "You should be using X library or function instead of Y", or "Try adding X and see if it works". This way the OP gets their answer in the comment, but the question will be cleaned up as it attains a sufficient number of votes.