I provided a number of comments to the question How to use getc()
instead of fgets()
?, along with some other people also providing comments, which were intended to guide the person asking towards the answer. I later provided an answer, but the commentary within the answer was minimal because the relevant information explaining/justifying its contents was mostly in the comments to the question. I didn't have the time/energy to transfer the commentary into my answer.
Overnight (my time), somebody got all the comments removed, depriving Stack Overflow of important material. Yes, comments are supposed to be 'ephemeral' — and these ones surely were — but you're not supposed to destroy valuable material, either. And these comments were of some value, and the answers were written on the assumption that the discussion and guidance in the comments would continue to exist.
They don't; they've been lost, presumably forever.
How can we prevent such wanton vandalism of valuable material from recurring? Yes, ideally I'd have enough time to beautifully transfer the relevant comments into an answer and edit and craft them into cogent text. Wake up! That isn't the world I live in, and I doubt if it is the world you live in either.
It must have involved moderator intervention; I didn't remove my comments, and I somehow don't suppose that the other commenting parties all removed theirs.
Please can we work out how to prevent over-enthusiastic moderatorial intervention in comment clean-up?
At the very least, if someone had contacted me saying "these comments need to be cleaned up; please transfer any relevant material into your answer" (e.g. with an @JonathanLeffler
comment), I would have done the transfer when I had time, for all it was unnecessary busy-work. As it is, 90% of the educational value of the Q&A has gone.