I think it is okay to leave such comments. Especially if you have more to say than just “thank you”, such as “thank you, that is indeed correct because X”. Most of the time, you should be able to add such a delta.
Another legitimate reason to post such a comment is that the person who left the first comment might have been withholding their up-vote for until the suggested improvement is incorporated and by answering to the comment, you can ping them. Personally, I wouldn't up-vote an otherwise good answer if it had a major error in it and by being notified that the error is now corrected, I can re-consider my voting so I'd kind of expect it. Of course, once I have been notified, there isn't much value in the comment any more and it can be garbage collected safely. (For more severe errors, you may substitute “not voted yet” with “down-voted” and “up-vote” with “withdraw the down-vote”.)
A protocol that I have seen used a lot and that I try to follow is this.
- Alice posts an answer.
- Bob leaves a comment suggesting an improvement to the answer.
- Alice agrees with the comment, up-votes it, updates her answer and replies to the comment, pinging and thanking Bob.
- Bob sees the updated answer, possibly up-votes it, and deletes his now-obsolete comment.
- Alice sees that her “thank you” comment is now dangling and deletes it as well.
This way, all necessary communication gets across and yet the site is kept tidy and moderators are not distracted from more important tasks than deleting obsolete comments.
If a moderator does delete the “thank you” comment, I think they should delete the original comment that suggested the edit as well, provided that the edit was fully incorporated and therefore the comment doesn't add much value any more.
marshall activist
word of the day for me