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I have faced the issue several times and may be other users as well. Whenever I post a comment to SE sites, it stays editable till 5 minutes only. And often I jump back into my comment at 5 and 1/2 minutes, start editing my comment for a better explanation and when I just try to save my edits SE informs me that 5 minutes is over. Isn't it pretty annoying?

Can't it be like the following:

  1. When a user adds a comment directly to a question/answer, the question/answer becomes it's parent reference.
  2. Every comment itself has a "comment" link by itself that lets users to add a new comment in context of the current comment. The current comment becomes the parent reference of the new comment.
  3. If a comment is deleted, all it's referenced comments point to the question/answer as applicable.
  4. A user is allowed to edit his/her comment until any new comment is posted, referencing it.

I think this would make SE users life a little better than before and would also solve the issue with 5 minutes timeout, many users might be facing.

EDIT:

To better explain my question, I am not really worried about the 5 minutes timeout, many of the users might have actually perceived. It's actually about maintaining the context in comments of a question/answer. The 5 minutes timeout should automatically be handled as a consequence.

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    So..... That feels like a pretty big overhaul for the comments, considering they are second class citizens here.... + i don't think that the 5 minutes time out is that big of an issue in itself. Comments are ephemereal and unimportant in the grand scheme of Stack
    – Patrice
    Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 22:33
  • @Patrice obviously they are the second class citizens but they are the ones who drives the users to right direction and still highly underrated :( Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 22:36
  • If you need extended discussion then that should take place in chat. Nested comments on questions would get extremely messy.
    – BSMP
    Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 22:37
  • When editing comments, just be quick (5 minutes seems to be a small time frame). Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 22:41
  • @AyanSengupta and in what way would a higher window to edit change that? I don't think it would bethat much help in changing that perception
    – Patrice
    Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 22:43
  • @Patrice you might have missed my point. My issue is not only with the lower timeframe. The point is in loosing the context. But anyway. Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 22:49
  • @AyanSengupta but with your new system there is no more context then currently. Withyour new system, if i delete the original comment as much is lost asit is currently (and your title makes it seem like your biggest issue is withthe edit window)
    – Patrice
    Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 22:51
  • @Patrice sorry for my clumsy question title. But if you think of the present system, I think it has the same flaw you were talking about. So it shouldn't make any difference in that context. Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 22:59
  • @AyanSengupta i said myself the current system has that flaw. Why should we change it if this isn't a change for the better? You're making the whole system a lot more complicated for no added benefit. I think there are better uses of dev time.
    – Patrice
    Commented Aug 18, 2016 at 1:25
  • @Patrice may be you are way too much busy to overlook my point of "added benefit" that I have already mentioned as "maintaining context" and that might come really handy for "future users" or else I guess devs here are little too lazy to adopt something new and loves anticipating outcomes. Don't wanna waste my time anymore. Cheers and keep up the spirit! Commented Aug 18, 2016 at 2:30
  • @AyanSengupta it's simply that i dont see how your suggested system preserves more context than the current one. Comments can become part of a chain as people reply to each other, and deleting one breaks context as much as it would in your new system. You seem to have added a layer of complexity just for "context". And your context is pretty much the same that we currently have. A comment chain is a comment chain, no matter if each comment is referencing another or just pinging a specific user. You seem to just hammer "context" without seeing it's not an improvement over what we currently have
    – Patrice
    Commented Aug 18, 2016 at 11:45

1 Answer 1

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Yeah, it's totally possible. Also adds complexity to what is currently a simple system.

If no one has replied, just delete your comment and post a new one. No time limit on this! If this doesn't work (for instance, because someone else has a reply in progress and posts it as you're writing your update), then editing would also be problematic.

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  • I know what you are talking about. Obviously it incurs some overhead. Unfortunately things get complicated for users when they see a past question/answer with lots of unrelated comments pulled together. Possibly most of them are meant to improve the quality of the answer. But their sequence becomes totally misleading. Certainly, as a new commenter I can delete my comment after 5 mins and rewrite but that doesn't solve the riddle with the context for a future reader. Commented Aug 17, 2016 at 23:05
  • @AyanSengupta but how would the system know your comment wasn't replied too? Not everyone knows the '@' syntax Commented Aug 18, 2016 at 1:14
  • @psubsee2003 c'mon...you must be kiddin! After FB and Twitter broke through, at least 80% of their users know the usage of '@' and I guess 40% of them are not even technical. And then SO is a site for technical persons and it needs minimum reputation to add a comment in SO for a technical person and that minimum reputation can only be earned by that technical person only when s/he has some familiarity with the flow of the site. Do you still believe it really matters? As a side-note, I'm really sorry but I couldn't understand what you were trying to convey. Could you please explain? Commented Aug 18, 2016 at 2:44

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