People have the habit of referring to answers/comments in the below fashion. This has some problems (as stated under each one)
The other answer under this question says that <...>
This assumes that more answers will not be added
The third answer from the top is correct but <...>
This assumes that the visitor is using the same ordering and that future voting will not cause a position change
The most upvoted answer is wrong.
This assumes that other answers can't overtake it
The accepted answer is outdated.
This assumes that the author of the question won't suddenly change their mind
The answer by <username> is correct for the most part but needs these improvements <...>
This assumes that the username will not be changed
The comment under this post makes a valid point.
This assumes that the comment won't be deleted
The comment by <username> suggests that <...>
This assumes that the username won't be changed
Lines like these assume that the indicator they are relying on (the username, the relative position of the post/comment with respect to the current post, the number of upvotes, the accepted check-mark, the number of answers under the post) are constants and will not change with time - which is not true.
Usernames change. The order of the answers depends on the net score of the post and the ordering choice of the viewer. The number of upvotes changes with time and a lower-ranking post now might win later on and replace the highest upvoted post. The 'acceptance' of a post is solely dependent on the author of the question's very human (susceptible to change) mood. New answers can be added in the future (hence changing the total number of answers).
Some real examples to express myself better:
This answer by Antonio Bakula says: "(like one in most upvoted answer)" - I have no idea which answer they are referring to as the most upvoted answer can change.
This answer by Marcel Degas says: "the most upvoted answer for that post was not super clear and there was no code example" and links to a post - on that post I find 7 answers. The current most upvoted one has a line of code in it. Now I need to guess what they meant by "there was no code example" and what is and isn't considered as a "code example". This would have been so much more easier if they would have just linked to the answer that they were referring to...
Or this answer that was written by michaelgmcd - which originally inspired me to write this post - says: "but seeing that the other (albeit more upvoted answer)" while it itself is the most upvoted answer! How am I supposed to know what they were referring to? Being <10k how do I know if that answer isn't deleted?
Search result of "most upvoted answer" for example.
My point being that improper referencing of this sort is way too common and as time goes on it can become a big issue where no one is sure who is referring to who. How can we resolve this?
@
: It's a visual indicator that we're talking about a username. A link to the actual user is better (as names can be changed), so don't only remove the@
when editing. (Either add a link or don't change it)@
as @Cerbrus says it's a visual indicator we are talking about a username. The other point about linking comments is valid though and I’ve been doing that since I first came to site.