In Stack Overflow, we have a prevention against short and not-so-meaningful comments like:
"+1", "-1", "huh?", "nononono", "blabla"
And so on by having a minimum number of comment characters (which, as of now, is 15) and I see this as something that do more good than harm though this obviously cannot prevent all possible cases for such comments.
We can still do something like this:
"blablablablablanotsomeaningful"
Or by any other methods to bypass the filters just as what Alexander O`Mara has demonstrated in the comments for this question.
This may also prevent some rarely-short-but-fit-comment like in the accepted answer of this post:
Yet. (oh why 10 chars...)
And that's OK, and we can live with that (though sometimes we might be a little restricted when we want to post a short and good comment - at least to our eyes).
However, I am curious to know why the name of a specific target audience would be included in this minimum character calculation?
@userwhohasverylongname +1
The above comment is OK.
But, though limited to the targeted user, by allowing the username as part of the calculated characters, does this not seem like defeating the purpose of putting in any minimum-number-of-characters rule in the first place?
Edit:
And just to clarify. I am simply curious to know what the reason is behind that.
This is because, while we actually already have such filter when we target a solo user comment (that is, to remove the @targetuser), we do not apply it to the user comment length.
I do not intend to ask why the comment filters are not made so strongly or to suggest that they must be made much stricter. No, that is not only involving too much works, but also may do more harm than good. And that is not my intention at all.
I only ask int the scope of the text of the comment length for a targeted user.
I hope that it clarifies my intention.