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I've seen many instances where someone comments on an answer that has been given to a question that was off-topic in their opinion, telling the answerer that they should not answer questions like that.

Sometimes I agree with their opinion about the question and think most others would as well, other times not so much, but I'm wondering about the constructiveness of a comment like that on an answer whether or not their assessment of the question was "correct".

I'm not including any examples because I think it seems clear enough what I'm referring to without meta-affecting anything, and I don't want the discussion to become overly focused on a specific instance. (And I'm not asking about comments on any of my own answers.)

Are those comments constructive, or just noise?

Does it matter if the question actually is off-topic, or are the comments on the answer constructive (or not) regardless of that?

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    As much as people are constantly complaining about how people don't tell them what's wrong with their bad answers when they get downvotes, they tend to complain even more when you do explain why the answer is a bad answer, which of course trains people to not bother. It's not unconstructive to tell people what problems their answer has, but it's rather rarely welcome information.
    – Servy
    May 1, 2017 at 20:19
  • 10
    @Servy Yeah, both halves of that are certainly true. But the comments I'm thinking of don't really offer any criticism of the content of the answer, but just state that it shouldn't have been provided based on the question. May 1, 2017 at 20:23
  • 2
    But then, I guess "should not exist" could be considered a problem their answer has. May 1, 2017 at 20:25
  • 6
    If that's all it says, then sure, it's not providing any relevant information. If it explains why, then it's quite useful.
    – Servy
    May 1, 2017 at 20:26
  • 2
    It most certainly is a problem with the answer (assuming it's a correct statement). Posting a comment that asserts the statement without any reasoning isn't particularly helpful, in the same way that posting a comment to say that an answer is technically correct isn't helpful (without an explanation of what is wrong). The main exception that comes to mind is if the question is already closed, or has lots of comments under it explaining its problems, at which point you could argue that the problems with the question are enumerated there, and don't need to be repeated.
    – Servy
    May 1, 2017 at 20:28
  • "assuming it's a correct statement" is the main problem I have with it. Sometimes when I see comments like that, I agree with them. Other times, I think they seem misguided. I just don't know if I should flag them as not constructive based on my opinion. May 1, 2017 at 20:36
  • 3
    If you feel that someone posts a comment that's simply incorrect, then that doesn't make it flag worthy. If you feel it's important, feel free to reply with your perspective. Someone disagreeing with you doesn't make it not constructive.
    – Servy
    May 1, 2017 at 20:42
  • I'm reluctant to add another comment. I know I can count on the original commenter to reply defending their original evaluation, and regardless of whether or not the answer is useful, I feel confident that an argument in the comments about whether or not it should be there is not. May 1, 2017 at 20:47
  • 1
    If you don't feel like sharing your alternate opinion, then feel free not to. You're not obligated to respond to every comment you see that's incorrect. It just doesn't mean that the comment is Not Constructive.
    – Servy
    May 1, 2017 at 20:48
  • 2
    Do you make it a habit of answering off-topic questions?
    – user1228
    May 2, 2017 at 15:50
  • @Will I don't think the Q refers specifically to OT questions. Actually, if we were talking only about this then most people would be in favor of such comments. OP is probably referring to other reasons like, for instance, bad grammar or lack of formatting (defects that characterize a bad Q but do not automatically prevent the existence of a good A, although they make it more difficult). May 2, 2017 at 16:49
  • 2
    This seems to be similar to a problem I've seen mentioned once or twice before, where some people will downvote an answer if the question is low-quality, regardless of the answer's quality, simply to get the Roomba to remove the question. May 2, 2017 at 17:06
  • @AndreaLazzarotto How do you know what sort of questions are being referred to? The question here says "the usual reason" which is pretty broad to me.
    – mason
    May 2, 2017 at 17:19
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    @AndreaLazzarotto OP is probably referring to other reasons like, for instance, bad grammar or lack of formatting I have never seen anyone say, or imply, a question shouldn't be answered because of bad grammar or formatting. I haven't ever seen someone even suggest that an answerer should have edited the question prior to answering (since comments were first introduced, and since meta was pro-meat). The only reason why I've ever encountered regularly is because the question was blatantly off topic. If my assumption (unclear q, sorry) is incorrect, I invite OP's edit.
    – user1228
    May 2, 2017 at 17:35
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    @Will No, I try to avoid answering off-topic questions. I'm sure I could be better about it, but I do. I really wasn't referring to comments on any of my own answers, though. I apologize if it's unclear. I was trying to make it more about the general case because people often seem to get overly focused on specific examples here. I'm considering how to edit it. I would have asked more carefully if I'd realized it would be this controversial of a topic. May 2, 2017 at 17:59

8 Answers 8

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No, a comment telling someone they shouldn't have answered a "bad" question is not constructive. If a comment like this is flagged, or I come across one when browsing the site, I'll delete it.

I keep stating this, but going after people who are providing good answers to "bad" questions is counterproductive. It won't do anything to stop bad askers who find this site via Google, are ordered to ask here by their bosses, etc. All it does is irritate and drive away the people who volunteer their time to provide good answers.

Earlier today, Shog9 articulated how helpful answers can even come out of bad questions, and I'll admit that I've answered plenty of bad questions myself. A bad question can still be a seed for a novel, useful answer, and berating someone for leaving that answer is something I strongly dislike.

Judge answers based on their technical merit. If you don't think the question is appropriate, take action on the question. I can't stop you from voting on the answers however you want, but I almost always will remove comments that admonish people for answering questions.

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    Someone posting an answer to an unanswerable question is a problem with the answer. If the problems that a question had didn't inhibit posting great answers then they wouldn't actually be problems with the question. If someone is posting an answer to a question that is completely unclear, or is way too broad, or is entirely opinion based, or whatever, then those problems make the answer a bad answer (at least in the majority of cases).
    – Servy
    May 1, 2017 at 20:39
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    Then perhaps we should remove the section titled "Answer well-asked questions" from How to Answer... May 1, 2017 at 20:39
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    @MikeMcCaughan - Telling people that they'll probably have a better time trying to answer well-asked questions isn't necessarily telling them they are forbidden from answering others. Your odds of being able to answer a well-asked question are higher, but as I point out above, sometimes even poorly asked questions can lead to great answers.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    May 1, 2017 at 20:46
  • 60
    @BradLarson So then whey do we even close questions in the first place, if there's no problem at all with anyone answering any question, regardless of how bad it is? The whole reason for closing existing is because SO has found that answering certain types of questions causes more harm than good.
    – Servy
    May 1, 2017 at 20:50
  • 12
    So, it's okay to admonish users in the help section but not the comments? I sometimes point people to [answer] indicating they should think about whether it's worth answering a crap question, just like the help section. Now I'm being told not to add comments like that because someone might answer with a helpful answer based on guessing or mind-reading or whatever. Just seems like we're saying, "do what you want, answer crap questions because we can't possibly do anything about the flood". It's frustrating to those of me who want to keep the original idea of high quality around. May 1, 2017 at 20:55
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    Telling people not to answer off-topic questions seems a very good idea to me. Answering, for example, a request for a tutorial, will give us a load of other such questions because people know they will get an answer before the questions gets closed. Answering such "bad" questions is in my opinion actively harming the site.
    – BDL
    May 1, 2017 at 21:59
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    @MikeMcCaughan - What I'm talking about are comments like "This is exactly whats wrong with this site now. Nobody should be answering questions for people too lazy to google." or "I get that you're trying to get rep, but whatever... encourage laziness." being left on good answers by people trying to help out (as two examples flagged and deleted today). The help center is suggesting that your time is better served answering good questions, not that you'll be punished if you happen to answer "bad" questions. It's not that we can't do anything about bad questions, it's that this won't help.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    May 1, 2017 at 22:19
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    @BradLarson: It seems to me that those two comments you gave as examples are more borderline rude, or perhaps not constructive for rudeness, than NC for saying the wrong thing. While a comment such as "This question is off-topic because XYZ, and in future it's better for the site if you don't answer such off-topic questions" does not seem to violate Be Nice, and does seem to be constructive. May 1, 2017 at 23:37
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    (For extra cognitive dissonance, I upvoted Shog's answer when I saw it earlier, and I still think it makes sense. I just don't think his defense of occasionally putting extra effort into [especially] downvoted questions can or should be applied to defending answering close-worthy questions.) May 1, 2017 at 23:39
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    @NathanTuggy - You have a point. Almost all of the ones I encounter lie on the harsh-to-rude end of the spectrum. It's rare that I find one expressing this in a polite and informative manner, so maybe I'm overstating things by saying that all of these are not constructive. It's just that if you start with the intent of punishing an answerer to a "bad" question, that usually doesn't lead to polite comments.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    May 2, 2017 at 4:23
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    How do you feel about doing this to people who answer obvious dupes? I like to leave a message that they should flag/vote to close as a duplicate instead of answering. I do only do this one then it is a single google search and the first result is the canonical. May 2, 2017 at 14:50
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    Sorry to see such an answer from staff (counting mods). More evidence that the decline in quality is actually driven by change in company policy (albeit one not matched in the Help Centre) rather than by the masses not following it. Honestly as long as we're being encouraged not to strictly curate, any more, I'm less inclined to bother, and I still strongly believe that if we all stop doing that then we might as well close up shop. Experts Exchange in 3..2..1...! May 2, 2017 at 15:00
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    @BoundaryImposition - Unless I've missed a memo, I'm not a Stack Exchange employee. This isn't "company policy", it is my personal opinion as a volunteer that other helpful volunteers should be treated with respect. A surefire way to cause a decline in quality is to drive away people contributing quality content, and I'm working to prevent that. I prefer to go after sources of low-quality content directly, rather than attacking the wrong people.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    May 2, 2017 at 15:05
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    @BradLarson People trying to answer unanswerable questions aren't contributing quality content. They're causing problems, not being helpful, and informing them of that is appropriate. If they don't know that they're doing something wrong, then they can't fix it. When you inhibit anyone from ever informing others that they're doing something wrong, and attack and drive away the people that actually care about quality content or the site's site standards, that's how you get a decline in quality.
    – Servy
    May 2, 2017 at 15:09
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    @NathanOliver - As long as you keep in mind that what might be an obvious duplicate to you isn't necessarily such to the person answering. They may feel that there are subtle differences, that the answers at the target are insufficient, or they weren't aware of the duplicate to begin with. I'd start by assuming the best about the answerer and be willing to accept that they disagree with your assessment. I've seen plenty of polite discussions go well, in both directions.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    May 2, 2017 at 15:13
28

In my opinion the constructiveness of such comment heavily relies on the given situation, which is basically fully made up by the question.


If the question is one that will be closed later on, then yes, those comments do have merit, as users that answer questions that inevitably will get closed later on deliberately choose to delay the deletion of said question, which means they directly counter-act the community-driven efforts of keeping this site clean.

On top of that, they're wasting their time, will ultimately gain nothing, and will probably cause even more trouble by complaining about the deletion of their answer as well as the mean, evil and elitist Stack Overflow userbase.


However, if the question fits the guidelines for questions but is considered bad due to things like bad indentation, the topic that's being asked about (creation of malware, denial of service, other nasty stuff...), awful grammar or spelling etc., those comments are neither warranted nor constructive, and should be flagged as such.


TL;DR: If it's clear that the user commenting is aiming at educating the author of the answer in a calm, neutral way about site mechanics (roomba etc.), then yes, the comments are constructive. If it's just a rant ("MUH QUALITIEEE"), then no, not constructive.

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    for i in xrange(0,10**10): print 'if the question fits the guidelines for questions but is considered bad due to things like bad intendation, awful grammar or spelling etc., those comments are neither warranted nor constructive' May 2, 2017 at 16:31
  • I think you missed the words "unless they" before "deliberately choose to delay". (Don't curse too much; I still followed it and maybe nobody else even noticed yet.) May 4, 2017 at 8:31
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Content-free "your answer is bad and you should feel bad" comments are not helpful, but we have comment flags for them already.

In contrast, it is helpful and even important to warn new users that their answers might be wasting their time or even hurting their reputation. There are several ways a new user can be punished for answering a bad question, and most are not at all obvious:

They might be wasting their time.

Especially bad questions can be deleted by the Community, taking their answers with them. Posting an answer prevents this in many cases, but not all.

(The question's author might also never accept or upvote any answers, but I think even a new user could foresee that outcome.)

They might have to waste even more time.

Two related and common forms of bad question are the "chameleon question", which seems clear but changes its meaning later, and the "Heisenquestion", which just trades one ambiguous representation for another. Answers, even good ones, to the first or most obvious interpretation might become nonsensical later.

The author then has to to either flag the question for moderator attention (if they are aware of that option), or update their own post to match. Otherwise, their helpful and informative answer to Question 1-A will collect (legitimate) downvotes for failing to answer Question 42i-ReindeerFlotilla.

They might be downvoted.

Discussed in "Should one downvote answers to off-topic questions?" (summary: "yes"). Update: And contradicted in "Is it okay to downvote answers to bad questions?" (summary: "no").

New users are generally told that they should start gaining reputation by answering questions, but they can lose reputation for decent-enough answers to questions that are duplicates or unclear.

A new user is obviously less likely to spot a duplicate. He or she is probably less likely to spot a help vampire, too.

A new programmer is less likely to spot an under-defined question... If he or she only knows one possible interpretation, then obviously the question is fully-specified and suitable for answering.


I think these are all things a new user should know, but is unlikely to learn on their own. A comment is a more gentle teacher (and maybe even more effective) than a downvote or a deletion.

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    eh, dunno. they seem to react to downvotes far more often than constructive comments. Many of these users simply don't care that they're not helping the site; They're still getting the feel good feeling of helping the OP, so their goal is met.
    – Kevin B
    May 2, 2017 at 18:11
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    @KevinB: The question was "Are those comments constructive, or just noise?", and I think the ones that (attempt to) instruct can be helpful. A comment might not get through to any particular user, but the attempt alone shouldn't qualify the comment as noise. May 2, 2017 at 18:26
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    The guideline about downvoting answers to bad questions has changed: See here: meta.stackoverflow.com/q/255459 (Now the answer is NO)
    – user000001
    May 2, 2017 at 19:27
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    @user000001: Is there some way of knowing which is the correct answer (assuming there is such a thing)? I've had the "yes" answer bookmarked for some time, and never noticed any contradiction until your reply just now. I see that the "no" Q&A is newer and has more votes, but it also has highly upvoted dissenting answers. Based on this new information, I can update my belief from "settled: downvote" to "undecided", but I think it would take a closing of the original question or a message from Stack Exchange, Inc. to slide all the way to "settled: do not downvote". Does such evidence exist? May 2, 2017 at 20:39
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    @user000001 that isn't a guideline. just a shared opinion.
    – Kevin B
    May 3, 2017 at 21:19
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Yes, but only in limited circumstances like

  1. The user answers by copying and linking to another answer on a duplicate question. Sometimes users don't know that they should flag the question as a duplicate.
  2. The question is too broad and/or effortless. Questions like "How I make website?" should not be answered. Giving the questioner a checklist isn't helpful. Flag them for closure.
  3. Guessing at answers. Sometimes the question doesn't give you enough to formulate an answer. So some eager users make a guess, which means you wind up with answers that look like this. Again, these should be flagged for closure or a comment should be left asking for more clarification.
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    I also letting them know about the habit of DVing answers of low-quality questions (Yes, it happens here on SO). I don't suggest that the should not answer, but just letting them know that this things happens. Especially if it's a simple 2-3 lines answer
    – Alon Eitan
    May 2, 2017 at 14:47
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    I've recently seen a 300k+ user answering a typo question that he was the first to VTC as typo... I couldn't resist commenting about this. Jun 22, 2019 at 20:13
7

Since you don't provide examples, I don't know if this is your case, but I think when there is a question that is clearly a homework question, and an answer that provides an answer ready to turn in without the asker having to understand or learn anything, a comment that such answers are not the best way to answer such questions is appropriate.

0
5

That depends on how good the answer is.

Stack Overflow is trying to be a repository of high-quality Q&A, not low-quality answers to low-quality questions or even mediocre answers to low-quality questions. If someone's answering a bad question, they should at least provide a very good answer to make the Q&A worth keeping around. A low-quality or mediocre answer doesn't really justify keeping a bad question around. For example, if someone provides a low-effort answer to a typo and the OP accepts it, this clearly has little to no value to the site - all they've done is create more work for other people by forcing us to delete it manually.

One other case where this kind of comment is constructive is cases where the question is unclear, overly broad, or incomplete to the point that we don't know if the answer(s) are addressing the OP's problem at all (or answers are just guessing/speculating as to what the problem is). In cases like this, it's really not possible to write a good answer, so the answer probably deserves to be downvoted on its own merit anyway. In cases like this, it's constructive to suggest that they wait for the OP to improve the question before answering so that they can write an adequate answer.

Another possible case is obvious XY problems, but again, this kind of answer probably deserves to be downvoted on its own merit anyway for not addressing the OP's actual problem.

One final example case is homework dumps. Since students must practice in order to learn to program, it's not helpful to them or to the site for someone to just spoon-feed them the code. In that case, it's absolutely constructive to comment telling the answerer not to do the OP's homework for them.

For a good answer that addresses the OP's problem, though, this kind of comment is not constructive.

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    This makes sense in the context of duplicate questions. If the answer regurgitates information from the dupe, it's not adding anything new and really shouldn't have been posted in the first place.
    – Makoto
    Oct 23, 2018 at 20:50
  • @Makoto And if it is a novel, useful, additional solution to the problem, beyond what's already on the canonical we want it posted to the canonical, not the duplicate.
    – Servy
    Jun 7, 2019 at 19:55
2

Locally? No. It's obviously going to help neither the asker of that question, nor the answerer (at least not directly).

But one thing many people seem unwilling to do around here is to consider the bigger picture. I think that this "help at all costs" mentality is exactly why our repository is so incredibly balanced towards the terrible-quality side of things.

If we can turn one answerer away from the habit of encouraging more terrible questions by answering them, then so much the better. Of course, it should be done politely. Under these circumstances, if you are hurt or offended by such a comment, then you're going to need to take a step back and interpret it in the way it was meant: an attempt to make a constructive comment regarding the wider implications of your personal answering policy. It's up to all of us to do our part, even if sometimes it seems easier "not to bother" because "they just keep on coming anyway". That sort of mentality will lead us ever-closer to Experts Exchange status, precisely the opposite of what this place is supposed to be.

Flagging these comments as non-constructive absolutely helps nobody, and that is non-constructive.

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  • Rather than straight out telling someone, choose to warn them I'd say. But the problem with the bigger picture is that it is just so darned big on Stack Overflow, very few people that frequent it really judge well the consequences of actions and a lack of action. I wonder if leaving such comments around for all eyes to see and copy will have negative effects of its own for example.
    – Gimby
    May 4, 2017 at 7:50
-6

Are those comments constructive, or just noise?

This is a false dichotomy, in my opinion.

Such a comment might not be constructive (it's at least debatable) - but at the same time still a reasonable comment to make (and certainly not noise). Who says everything needs to be constructive?

... however, it should be polite and explicit about the reason.

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    Comments are ripe for removal. An unconstructive comment usually doesn't last very long.
    – Makoto
    Oct 23, 2018 at 20:45
  • @Makoto: Too bad. Sometimes it's important to be unconstructive.
    – einpoklum
    Oct 23, 2018 at 21:01
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    We require that questions and answers be useful, why wouldn't we require the same of comments?
    – BSMP
    Oct 24, 2018 at 3:04
  • @BSMP: Not only constructive comments are useful. A "destructive" comment can also have some use.
    – einpoklum
    Oct 24, 2018 at 7:44
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    I think we're working with two different definitions of the word "constructive".
    – BSMP
    Oct 24, 2018 at 7:48
  • @BSMP: "Constructive, adj: 1. helping to improve; promoting further development or advancement (opposed to destructive)". Suggesting an answer be removed is not helping to improve it, nor to develop it, nor to advance it.
    – einpoklum
    Oct 24, 2018 at 8:14

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