It seems like a fairly common occurrence for new users to post unrelated questions in comments to answers. I sometimes get these on my own answers, and I just found another one on this answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/45485198/126352
I know there's a "flag comment" feature but the guidance I've seen suggests (although not necessarily definitively) that flagging in cases like this should be limited to egregious cases or repeat offenders. For example, here's 2014 guidance from @BoltClock, implying that flagging shouldn't be the first line of defense:
If a user keeps veering off-topic in comments, flag the offending comments and remind them to stay on-topic and to avoid lengthy conversations.
Furthermore, there's no flag for "new question" (or anything like it) in the comment-flagging reasons.
So, now that I found this off-topic comment, how should I handle it? Should I flag it as "It's no longer needed."? Flag it as "Something Else"? Or should I just comment with a recommendation that the commenter should open a new question?
The latter recommendation is what I found here:
when the question is definitely outside the scope of the original question, and too complex to answer in a short comment, telling the questioner to post it as a new question is the correct way to go about it.
But this 2-year-old recommendation was before the last year's flurry of "make SO nicer for newbies" work so I was wondering: is "add your own comment" still the right approach to deal with unrelated questions in comments?
If it is, then:
- Is there a well-tested (for newbie-friendliness) template language for how these kinds of comments should be written? I tried a few drafts and had trouble finding the right tone that was encouraging to the user without being rude or (just as bad!) encouraging back-and-forth argument about whether the question was really unrelated. (Although users with 3K rep should know better, so maybe a little unfriendly might be OK in this case, although I'm still curious about the more common case where question in comments come from newbies)
- Is the SO team already looking at a way to automate this kind of "ask a question instead!" feedback with friendly text and usability-tested UX, like we do with duplicate questions and other minor violations of SO etiquette where we want to gently teach newbies what to do without driving them away and without adding work for moderators? If not, then I'll open a feature request! ;-)
UPDATE: Looks like there isn't canonical language for this case. In the interest of helping others avoid re-inventing the wheel, here's what I wrote:
[username redated] - your follow-up question about Date runtime behavior is not closely related to the answer above which is focused on TypeScript typings. Therefore, it's not likely that you'll get this question answered here. If you ask a new SO question, you'll likely have more success getting it answered.