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The user "UnholySheep" helped me in the comments by suggesting an out of bounds index, however since it's in the comments upvoting doesn't do anything. Can I reward him/her somehow? Is there a way to send reputation to a user? (link)

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    Whew! First thing to do is restore your question! As it is, it's no longer a question: "Here's the WORKING code"! You should leave the 'wrong' version there, you can always post the solution as a separate answer.
    – Jongware
    Commented Jan 10, 2017 at 17:56
  • @RadLexus I did! I posted an answer, but I cannot accept it right away, two days have to pass (that's a rule). I no longer have the wrong version.
    – user6244076
    Commented Jan 10, 2017 at 17:58
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    The wording of the text suggests there is no problem in the code in there. All such information should not be there in the question. Please make sure it remains a real, standalone, question.
    – Jongware
    Commented Jan 10, 2017 at 18:01
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    If the user wanted to get reputation for helping you, they would have posted an answer. Commented Jan 10, 2017 at 18:01
  • Granted, if the question needed a lot of clarification in the comments, it wouldn't have been a good idea to answer it before that clarification was accomplished. Sometimes the question gets answered during the clarification. It's not a big deal. People wouldn't help if they didn't want to. Commented Jan 10, 2017 at 18:05

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You can't. Or, well, maybe you can but you should not.

Here is why.

Suppose you click the name of this user and check out his Questions and Answers. Click a random one and upvote it.

That is not fair. If you don't know what the question or answer is about, you cannot decide whether it's a good one or not. What if you accidentally upvote a very bad answer, making others - with as much experience as you - think it's actually a good answer?

Okay, so find a answer of which you can appreciate its correctness and upvote that.

Still not fair. There may be other answers which are just as good or better, but you are deliberately picking one based on the poster's name.

So, you pick a question where this OP is the only answerer and upvote that.

Still not fair. Even then, you are not voting for the correctness of that answer!

In conclusion, don't vote "for" a user in any way, vote for contents only.


What you could have done: invite the commenter to post the comment as a proper answer. There are lots of benefits attached to that. Not only can the commenter add more detail to it, but also others can more easily comment on it as well, and vote it up or down (!), which is not possible with comments.

In addition, comments are primarily meant for asking clarifications (a "rule" that is often enthousiastically broken by everyone, including me), and it's always possible they can get deleted without any notification.

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  • I couldn't have invited them to post it because it was just an suggestion, not an answer, thanks anyways.
    – user6244076
    Commented Jan 10, 2017 at 18:22
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    @theo2003: usually such a suggestion is done because the commenter has an idea of what's actually wrong. If I'm fishing for a solution with a comment, I can usually expand that into a full answer.
    – Jongware
    Commented Jan 10, 2017 at 18:27
  • I like the nuance in this answer. Everybody does that from time to time. But this isn't how the site should work. Commented Sep 29, 2018 at 8:08
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The only thing you should do is upvote their comment.

Comments which answer the question are pretty common, but are discouraged because we would prefer people to post answers instead of leaving answers in the comments. Users also don't expect to receive a reward for helping via a comment, so there is no obligation to do so. Let reputation be earned naturally, not artificially.

If the user doesn't post an answer, it's fine for you to post an answer which explains the problem and solution, and then credits the user (as you've done).

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    it's also appreciated to post as community wiki, which doesn't leave the impression you're making rep on the back of the commenter. Commented Sep 29, 2018 at 8:09

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