This question is motivated by Joel Coehoorn's answer to Can we do more than just deleting rude comments?:
Answering or commenting on a question is critical by it's nature, and it's harder to be nice while being critical at the same time. Or perhaps it's too easy to be meaner than we need to be. But there are simple things we can do when answering or commenting on a question that help.
Here's an example. [...]
But that's just one thing. It's a play in a playbook. Something we should be asking is how we can collect these plays, these little techniques, to grow the playbook, and then communicate this playbook to other people who predominately answer and comment on questions.
Which writing tricks and techniques you find helpful to make your posts and comments more welcoming, sympathetic and/or positive?
A few meta remarks about this question. The intent here is not building a manual of style, or any similarly prescriptive purpose (this should address the hypothetical "don't tell me how to be nice" objection alluded to by Nisarg). Rather, the aims are collecting suggestions that we -- individually -- might choose to make use of, and raising any associated communication issues and nuances for further reflection and discussion. This could give us something akin to a survey of the landscape, coalescing some of our knowledge about communication styles that currently is either tacit or spread across a thousand Meta posts. That being so, the question is intentionally broad (party like it's 2008!), but in a manner that, I believe, is acceptable in Meta.
On a final note, title suggestions (and edits) for this question are most welcome. (I originally went for "Positive communication playbook", but that was rather vague, and could be read as overtly prescriptive.)