There is a very common behavior that I see from users here, both novice and veteran (especially veteran) where the comments section under a question is used as a kind of "quick answer" box, providing whatever kind of answer could be provided within 600 characters. This is bad for this site, for several reasons.
It makes the site harder to use
The basic mechanism by which this site works is that it functions as a Q/A site, allowing users to receive help with specific issues they are facing, and allowing visitors to benefit from the accumulated knowledge of users that have already faced the issues they are querying.
Part of ensuring this mechanism works is that both users and visitors know exactly where to look to find the answers to their questions. If users of this site are burying their answers in the comments sections of a question, then it makes use of this site more difficult.
Answers provided in comments also means that if other users attempt to do searches for their issue, potential solutions aren't going to show up in their search results. Given that this site aspires to function as a repository for valuable solutions to problems, that is incredibly self-defeating.
It bypasses the Reputation System
The whole point of the Reputation system is that Good Answers get upvoted, and receive higher priority on the page; Bad Answers get downvoted, and get buried, hidden, or in extreme cases, removed. Comments aren't subjected to this system of checks, which means that if bad answers are posted to the comments, we have to flag them for removal by moderators, and I don't know if you've seen the queues lately, but they've already got their work cut out for them.
Yes, it's possible for bad quality comments to get removed, but it requires Moderation. Bad quality Answers can be curated by the user base without needing to involve moderators
It discourages users from providing actual answers
This one is a bit of a quagmire, in that questions with a lot of comments probably had some issues with how the question was originally formulated, attracting comments discussing how the post needed to be improved, leading to a lack of answers or answers that were based on a misunderstanding of what the question was actually asking, resulting in low quality answers.
However, many questions that attract a lot of comments have done so because many of those comments are half-answers, or some form of hashing out what the correct answer might be. This isn't what comments are for. Comments are for working to improve a question (or answer) by asking for clarifications or suggesting different ways to word things.
When a question has a lot of half-answers (again: not subject to the Reputation system) users who might be inclined to try to provide a proper quality answer to a question instead get deterred, because the comments already contain answers.
It encourages "Chattiness" in the comments section
The Comments, both for answers and questions, aren't intended for free-form discussion. If a user wants to tangent off on a subject, or they want to try to hash out an answer, they should be using a Chatroom instead. It's very easy to create a chatroom when needed, and using a Chatroom to hash out an answer before providing a proper answer to the question is a far better solution than trying to handle it in the comments section.
How should we handle this?
What is a good way to approach users who are using the comments system in this manner? I've been trying to flag comments that incorrectly attempt to answer questions, but would it be appropriate to gently remind users that the comments system shouldn't be used that way, or should we refrain from direct confrontation?
Regarding the Duplicates
This post has since been tagged as a duplicate of a very large number of other posts dealing with similar questions about comments being used to answer questions. None of these posts satisfy my issue, for several reasons.
For starters, some of those discussions are almost half a decade old, and by this point, they reflect a stage in this stack's development that it isn't in anymore. Marking a question as a duplicate of a question 5 years older is appropriate when nothing has changed since that original question, but that isn't the case here: the site has evolved since then, and the issues the site faces are different today than they were back in 2014. I think it's valuable to reference those questions to give context for this discussion, but calling this a "duplicate" is a misuse of the convention.
Secondly, as has been made abundantly clear in the comments below this post, a lot of the answers being provided in those posts don't actually address my core issue. @Robert, for example, advises in their 2014 answer that Answers-as-Comments should have a Community Wiki answer created in their stead; that's not a bad response, but it doesn't address whether the original comments should be dealt with or not, and leaves open the implication that it's still okay for users to attempt to leave answers in the comments of a question, something that is expressly prohibited by the rules of this site (emphasis mine):
Comments are temporary "Post-It" notes left on a question or answer. They can be up-voted (but not down-voted) and flagged, but do not generate reputation. There's no revision history, and when they are deleted they're gone for good.
[...]
When shouldn't I comment?
Comments are not recommended for any of the following:
[...]
- Answering a question or providing an alternate solution to an existing answer; instead, post an actual answer (or edit to expand an existing one);
Which is especially pertinent because this post managed to attract two moderators who both are openly encouraging users to leave Comments-As-Answers. The idea that moderators of this stack would openly encourage users to break the rules is... pretty incredible, if you'll forgive my understatement.
So in so many words, I don't believe this question constitutes a duplicate of the posts above.