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Related: Is a comment telling someone not to answer constructive?

The "unfriendly" tag seems to have a similar role to the older "not constructive" reason. In fact, this answer even seems to imply that it behaves similarly to the old "not constructive" reason "internally."

Will a lot of the things that used to be considered "not constructive" now be considered unfriendly? For example, in his answer to the linked post, Brad Larson♦ argues that comments telling people not to answer off-topic questions are not constructive and should be flagged accordingly. That being said, will they now be treated as unfriendly instead?

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2 Answers 2

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The big issue with "not constructive" was... Folks used it for everything. Rude comments, unfriendly comments, jokes, non sequiturs, blather, noise ...

It didn't mean anything.

The hope is, this new flag will be limited to a subset of that. The ... Unfriendly subset.

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  • 1
    Should these comments be flagged as unfriendly? Commented Aug 9, 2018 at 3:16
  • 3
    Probably? Depends on the comment.
    – Shog9 Mod
    Commented Aug 9, 2018 at 3:36
  • I could be extremely polite in a comment that is completely off topic. Or I could be very rude telling someone to very minute details every, single, thing, they did wrong.
    – Taplar
    Commented Aug 10, 2018 at 21:40
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"Not constructive" seems closer to "no longer needed", and "unfriendly" more seems like a less severe "rude", although there may be some overlap. At least that's based on the literal meaning of the words (ignoring how people may be using it).

Explanation by example:

This is a horrible question. Have you tried X, Y or Z?

Unfriendly (or rude).

Somewhat constructive.


This is a horrible question.

Unfriendly (or rude).

Not constructive.

Not needed ("no longer needed").


What do you think of XKCD?

Not constructive.

Not needed ("no longer needed").

Not unfriendly.

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