In the most recent welcoming blog about comment evaluation, something caught my eye.
In the sample unwelcoming comments, 3 out of 5 comments are seemingly posted by users who (almost surely, judging by the content) have already made a previous comment trying to get the OP to improve their code, but haven't got a positive response on that. A 4th is borderline that.
Of course, without the actual posts, I can't judge what exactly was going on, but it seems to me these users started out sincerely trying to improve, got ignored, and then went on to use a more serious/unwelcoming tone in their comments to get their point across.
I can imagine that users spotting a serious flaw, pointing it out, and getting ignored post such comments. It's obviously important to them getting their point across, and they've failed at it once.
What should we recommend users do in such a situation instead of posting an unwelcoming comment?
Related discussion about if these comments were rightfully judged to be unwelcoming.
Apparently, SE has chosen to change the blog post without a version history. The relevant comments from the previous version:
“No. As it stands the C# marshaler is going to call CoTaskMemFree to deallocate the memory. This is now rather a waste of time. You won’t listen to my advice. If you won’t work find out how the string is allocated you can’t make progress.”
“And this is tagged Javascript why?”
“Also, any time you have enumerated columns, you can be sure that something’s gone very, very wrong with your design. That said, you’re probably after LEAST(). But don’t do that. Fix your design.”
“For the last time, use the serial number code and replace kIOPlatformSerialNumberKey with kIOPlatformUUIDKey“
“Please provide a full compilable sample if you want anyone to be able to help you: https://stackoverflow.com/help/mcve. I have already told how you can bind to the property. If you can’t make it work, you are doing something wrong.”