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After answering a question, I NLN (No Longer Needed) flagged two comments under said question that provided an answer (pretty much the same answer as mine), but they were both declined with no explanation. I then mod flagged explaining why they should be deleted, but the mod flags were also declined with no explanation. When I reflagged one asking why they were declined and linking to Help Center guidance that indicated those comments shouldn't exist, that comment was declined, again with no explanation.

These are the two comments:

Do you mean you need \b70\d{7}\b? Why do you always try to add [0-9]? Your last regex would work if you removed [0-9]

and

\d is equivalent to [0-9]. Whenever you write [0-9]\d{7} it's like you were writing \d\d{7}, which is equivalent to \d{8}. This is why your regexes match 10 digits instead of 9. Drop [0-9] and it'll work fine.

I can certainly understand why the NLN flags may have initially been declined; mods don't always check the full context of a flag, and the first comment is arguably asking clarification questions in addition to providing an answer (though the full context would show that's clearly not the case, and that the commenter was not interested in a response from OP). What I can't understand is why the subsequent flags explaining the problem were declined as well.

Here is my explanation in the mod flags:

This is an answer posted as a comment. It should not be posted as such, on top of the fact that there exists an answer posted as an answer. It is squarely "No longer needed"

I would actually love to provide substantially more information than this nearly every time I mod flag, but unfortunately mod flags are limited to a very short 200 characters.

Ironically, my comment notifying the offending commenters to please post answers as answers instead of as comments was deleted.

According to https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/comment, comments are not supposed to be used for:

Answering a question or providing an alternate solution to an existing answer; instead, post an actual answer (or edit to expand an existing one)

So why were these flags declined and the offending comments kept? I don't really care about the declined flags against my flagging record (I flag often enough that it won't affect a ban); I am mostly interested in answers not being posted as comments where an existing answer already covers the same material, especially by users who ought to know better.

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  • I'm pretty sure that we had this discussion on MSO earlier, but I am not able to find that. Here is a related discussion on CRMSE codereview.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/8874/… Apr 24, 2019 at 21:28
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    I think you should also mention the fact that post was closed as simple typographical error and then reopened. Pointing to a trivial mistake in the comments is justified in my opinion, if you are also voting to close the question.
    – ayhan
    Apr 24, 2019 at 21:29
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    @ayhan First, a trivial error is not an off-topic close reason, and shouldn't really weigh that heavily on the fact that an answer should be posted as an answer, not as a comment. Second, the question was wrongly closed as a typographical error; that's why it was reopened; the question's closure/open status is irrelevant to the problem of the comments here.
    – TylerH
    Apr 24, 2019 at 21:31
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    @BhargavRao Not sure I follow; in this case, the comments were wrongly made the instant they were posted. They were then additionally obsolete/redundant after I posted my answer, which came before the first flags. I don't see any scenario where, at least after the explanatory mod flags came, the comments should not be deleted. The comments both also were sufficient to serve as complete answers to the question, not just partial observations.
    – TylerH
    Apr 24, 2019 at 21:33
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    I was referring to the question in the title, just because a user has posted an answer as a comment, it doesn't mean that the comment should be flagged. The keyword in the help page is "not recommended". Users are not recommended to post answers as comments, but the comments as such are not flag-able. (also, we can't reply to a comment flag) Apr 24, 2019 at 21:37
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    @BhargavRao I didn't know about the lack of ability to add reasons on flag handling for comments, but declining such a flag seems a little rude, IMHO. Anyway, yes it technically says "not recommended", but first, it says "When shouldn't I comment". "Shouldn't" in bold and italics seems pretty clear to me that it... should not be done.
    – TylerH
    Apr 24, 2019 at 21:39
  • The "recommended" part overrules the "Shouldn't" part in the help pages, @Tyler. In a slightly related discussion: The help pages are tailored to cater to the network as a whole. On the network there are many sites which strongly forbid answers posted as comments. Sites which 1. are discussion based (IPS, Workplace, Academia, etc) 2. are small in size, which want posters to post answers to increase the answered %. On SO, we do allow users to post answers as comments meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/253045/… Apr 24, 2019 at 21:43
  • @BhargavRao Why do you think a secondary descriptor would overrule a header that is also both bold and italicized? Do you have some source (e.g. meta post) that makes that determination? Anyway, that link you provided doesn't actually make a determination, it's just 1 random user asking about the issue and another offering a hypothesis why. The answer doesn't make an attempt to claim that it's either OK or not.
    – TylerH
    Apr 24, 2019 at 21:49
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    @BhargavRao And again, the comments in this case don't even match the description in the accepted answer there. These two comments were posted right off the bat as complete answers. There was no organic discussion that "led to a solution". It was just "bam, here's the first and second comment both providing a solution for OP's question along with explanation". I can't say for certain without checking, but I seem to recall every prior NLN flag I've cast on a comment answering the question has been deleted. This seems like a stark departure from policy to me.
    – TylerH
    Apr 24, 2019 at 21:50
  • There is this meta meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/340572/…. (Oh and BTW, "random" users post meta questions, and "random" users answer it ... but the community as a whole decides whether the agree to it by upvoting it, or otherwise). The other NLN flags should probably have been declined, but I delete comments posted as answers, if the answerer has moved them to an answer, or if the content in the comment has been included in some one else's answer. (Also, I didn't decline any of your flags here) Apr 24, 2019 at 21:58
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    Upvoting because of perceived value in the continued existence of this question and the discussion contained within, not because of agreement or any other nonsense.
    – user4639281
    Apr 24, 2019 at 23:15
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    @BhargavRao 7 upvotes on a question is hardly community consensus. And by "random user" I mean someone who is not a moderator or employee. For example, I think this is exactly the kind of thing that should be used to indicate Meta consensus instead; it's an authoritative source (a moderator) giving direct, actionable instructions, and it's got a score of 390. That's not only a much higher score than both the ones you linked, it's also directly addressing what to do.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 14:19
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    That answer doesn't say anything about deleting said comments. bsides, mods aren't policy makers. I wouldn't take a post by a mod saying X is X as any more of an authoritative response than you or I saying it.
    – Kevin B
    Apr 25, 2019 at 15:20
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    @TylerH, I'd be very careful to call users from the community as "random". Remember that mods are not kings who rule over the community, stamping their views on everyone and suspending users who're against them. Mods follow the general rule set by users from the community. Apr 25, 2019 at 16:42
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    @BhargavRao Trust me, I'm not one to kowtow as a matter of policy :-) But mods help guide policy enforcement and are in contact with CMs as necessary to get additional/more professional guidance, and the community elects them to be representative of the behavior we want to see. Typically when someone asks a question about how they "should" handle something in the system, a mod providing such guidance should be relied upon as much as if not more than a non-mod, as mods should know the right answer for the community, plus additional info/context not available to other (random) users.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 18:36

2 Answers 2

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I declined these flags, and I fully expected this to become a point of discussion on Meta. Your growing insistence was clearly evident as you continued to flag the same comments repeatedly. I'm not sure what you were hoping to accomplish by so doing, other than annoying the moderators. Mission accomplished.

Let's unpack this one step at a time.

First, you flagged the comments as "no longer needed". I declined those flags for essentially the reason you cite in the question. It was not at all obvious to me why those comments were "no longer needed". They looked relevant, on-topic, helpful, and constructive. They were not requesting a clarification that had since been provided. They did not appear to be referring to an old revision of the question. I scrutinized things pretty carefully, in fact, and, although I am not a regular expressions expert, I did not find any conceivable argument that could be made in favor of deleting those comments. As such, I declined the flags.

Then, you flagged the comments again with a custom flag, explaining your rationale for flagging as "no longer needed". Unfortunately, your basis for flagging these comments as "no longer needed" was incorrect. The fact that a comment could be interpreted as an answer to the question does not justify flagging it as "no longer needed". Comment flags have two possible outcomes: either the flag is declined and the comment is kept, or the flag is marked helpful and the comment is deleted. Deleting a comment that conveys useful information is incredibly stupid and harmful, so I'm not going to do that.

I am strongly opposed to deleting comments because they "should have been posted as an answer". First, that assessment is thoroughly subjective. Obviously the person who posted the comment didn't feel that it was of acceptable quality to be posted as an answer, or they would have done so. If you disagree, then you can post an answer. But that is not a justification for deletion of the comment. Second, even if you could objectively prove that the comment should have been posted as an answer, the fact remains that it wasn't. The fact that you think the comment could/should have been posted as an answer proves that the comment provides a significant amount of value. It is utterly foolish to destroy value by deleting a comment because you think it breaks some kind of rule. That's cutting off one's nose to spite the face.

The argument could be (and, indeed, has been) made that the Help Center says "Comments are not recommended for…[a]nswering a question or providing an alternative solution to an existing answer; instead, post an actual answer (or edit to expand an existing one)." This is absolutely correct. Comments are not recommended for answering a question. However, "not recommended" is altogether different from "should be deleted". In particular, "not recommended" puts the onus of judgment on the user who posts the comment. It doesn't define some kind of "rule" that prohibits posting useful, relevant information as a comment

At the risk of repeating myself, deleting comments because they contain too much information and might therefore be useful to someone is an incredibly stupid notion, and I categorically refuse to practice it.

Now, there is one additional component of your custom flag, and that is the point that you've since posted an answer to the question, thus (arguably) rendering those comments obsolete. I did not agree with that. Again, I am admittedly not a regular expressions expert, but it looked to me like your answer was distinct from the comments posted by Wiktor and Andrea. I looked sufficiently carefully that I would have noticed obviously identical content, but no harder, because those comments were not causing a problem and therefore there was no motivation to delete them. At worst, they were saying essentially the same thing as your answer. At best, they were providing additional useful information, and you were only flagging them because of a myopic interpretation of what you perceived to be a "rule". I did—and will always—err on the side of preservation of useful information.

Finally, there was a third set of flags. At this point, I was quite annoyed. The likelihood that I was going to reverse my decision was essentially zero. It appeared to me that you were just raising additional flags to be annoying. The standard workflow for moderator flags is: (1) you flag, (2) a moderator reviews and acts, if appropriate in their judgment, and (3) there is no step 3. At this point, we'd already gone through a further optional "clarification" step, and still the moderator disagreed that there was any need to take action. There was no point in flagging it again.

Furthermore, there was no way that I could do what you were asking demanding. You didn't quote your third set of flags, so allow me:

Please explain why these flags are being declined rather than just declining silently. "When shouldn't I comment?" from stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/comment specifies this as a valid case

There is no way for moderators to include an explanation for the dispensation of a comment flag. That option only exists for flags on posts (questions or answers). So, even if I wasn't sufficiently annoyed at this point and wanted to provide a detailed explanation, I couldn't do it. I really had no choice but to, once again, decline your flags. Especially because I still didn't want to delete the comments you were flagging, because the situation had not changed since I looked at it ten minutes earlier.

You essentially answer your own question right there in the question, albeit without even realizing it:

So why were these flags declined and the offending comments kept? I don't really care about the declined flags; I am mostly interested in answers not being posted as comments, especially by users who ought to know better.

The flags were declined because you admittedly didn't care about whether or not the comments were useful and relevant: you only cared about attempting to dole out some kind of "justice" by punishing users whom you thought should "know better". Frankly, I felt like you should have known better.


As for the bonus question of why your admonition not to answer in comments was deleted, I have several responses to that.

First, I can use your own logic against you. If there are any "rules" regarding the appropriate use of comments, it's that they should be meaningful and relevant to the question. Yours wasn't; it was merely meta-commentary about another comment.

Second, and more importantly, that comment had already served its purpose: Wiktor had seen and responded to it:

Screenshot of deleted comments

That conversation had run its course, was not going to be helpful to future viewers (unlike the comments you flagged), and was not otherwise relevant to the question. Obsolescence is a standard reason to delete comments. As such, I deleted them.

Furthermore, Wiktor's justification for posting his remark as a comment instead of an answer made perfect sense to me: he had voted to close the question. It's standard practice not to post an answer to questions you are voting to close. When a gentle nudge in the right direction is required to accompany the closure, a comment is an appropriate way to provide that. The fact that you disagreed with Wiktor's vote to close seemed to be what was driving your responses in the comments and your flags. You quickly got condescending, attempting to explain to Wiktor what a "typo" was:

Screenshot of comments that I should have deleted, but didn't the first time around

I should have deleted these comments the first time around, but I didn't. Mea culpa. I've now corrected that mistake.

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  • 14
    I’ve been waiting for a mod to say this for years, so I can quote it. Common sense rules the day. What a relief!
    – Dan Bron
    Apr 24, 2019 at 23:59
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    @DanBron this has nothing to do with common sense, it is purely site-specific tradition to consider such comments okay, and I know other sites where attempts at answers in comments are ruthlessly wiped out.
    – gnat
    Apr 25, 2019 at 7:11
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    I guess the converse is also true, and explains why we get so many non-answers posted in the answer box on Stack Overflow. I'd prefer that the "mess" exist in the comments than in the answers. I also submit that this is absolutely common sense. Deleting valuable contributions because you personally think that they should instead have been posted as an answer is not at all sensible. The job of a moderator is never to destroy value, at least not on Stack Exchange sites. That is thoroughly perverse. Other sites regularly delete comments that become a problem; that's also equally true on SO. Apr 25, 2019 at 7:27
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    This is quite unfortunate; I think this answer grossly mischaracterizes the events and the motivations of the subject, in order to come to a position that is not only wrong (and harmful to SO, in my opinion), but furthermore, and just as importantly, your response contains several problematic, untrue, and/or misleading statements/arguments. I'll try to go through them each.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 16:06
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    "Your growing insistence was clearly evident as you continued to flag the same comments repeatedly. I'm not sure what you were hoping to accomplish by so doing, other than annoying the moderators. Mission accomplished." This seems kinda rude of you; I flagged the comments as NLN in good faith, and I re-flagged with a mod-flag explanation in good faith, too. I even asked for an explanation in good faith, but unfortunately I didn't know mods couldn't provide explanations on comment flags. Mea culpa.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 16:06
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    That you think I was trying to annoy moderators or some other childish thing is frustrating; I would hope you or any mod would recognize that as a long-time prolific flagger, editor, and otherwise curator of the site, that my actions were sincere. Moderators especially should assume good faith. It's hurtful to see you didn't do that here in my case and instead assumed ill intent.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 16:07
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    "I did not find any conceivable argument that could be made in favor of deleting those comments" The existence of the same content in an answer didn't jump out at you? I'm not a regex expert either, but a solution existing in an answer makes the same solution existing in a comment unneeded 100% of the time. Otherwise, what's the point of even having the answer function? Comments are not for answers or solutions, they're for clarification requests or suggestions to improve the post. Users can't edit a comment, can't downvote it for inaccuracy, can't accept it as the solution.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 16:07
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    "Unfortunately, your basis for flagging these comments as "no longer needed" was incorrect" Actually it is quite factually correct; the content existed in a more appropriate form: an answer. This seems to be the crux around which your entire... diatribe, for lack of a better word, is constructed. "The fact that a comment could be interpreted as an answer to the question does not justify flagging it as "no longer needed" First, these comments aren't being "interpreted" as an answer; they are answers. They answer OP's question by giving a solution and they provide supporting explanations.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 16:07
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    "Obviously the person who posted the comment didn't feel that it was of acceptable quality to be posted as an answer, or they would have done so." Actually it's obvious from his request for closure of that Q and myriad comments throughout the page that the person didn't think the question deserved to exist at all. Not to mention they consistently applied an inaccurate close reason. This whole paragraph of yours just repeats the wrong claim for why I was flagging (again, I flagged the comments as "no longer needed", because there was an answer that said those things).
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 16:08
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    "deleting comments because they contain too much information and might therefore be useful to someone is an incredibly stupid notion" And at the risk of repeating myself, this is not why I flagged the comments for deletion, and at this point it seems pretty clear that you set out in writing this post to tar me for some reason by making it look like I had some ridiculously off-base reason for flagging the comments.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 16:08
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    Why are you so adamant about a Q&A pair that is absolutely useless for anyone other than the OP? There's zero reason for this pair to stay around. "Why is my regexp to find 9 digits only finding 10? Because your regexp looks for 10..." This Q&A pair does not deserve this much discussion/emotion.
    – Kevin B
    Apr 25, 2019 at 16:45
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    Claims that this is an unfair malignment or misrepresentation are not defensible. This is a completely accurate account of how I interpreted your actions, and I stand by it. To be clear, there is nothing necessarily wrong with raising a second flag that is more clear/explicit than your first flag. That second set of flags made me look more closely. I just still happened to disagree with you. It was that third set of flags that clearly suggested you were on a mission not to be disagreed with and that caused me to become annoyed. Apr 25, 2019 at 18:53
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    As for the elephant in the room, the fact that this discussion just blew up my inbox with 15 comments, can we all agree that that is a misuse of the comments feature? If what you are trying to comment doesn't fit in the comment box, then it probably shouldn't be a comment. Apr 25, 2019 at 18:54
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    @CodyGray To be clear, you're standing by the fact that you've entirely made up a reason for why I flagged, despite me having now refuted that reason quite clearly and explicitly?
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 19:05
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    @CodyGray And as for the elephant in the room, I'd be happy to discuss things in chat, where I think you know (if not, color me surprised, but now you know) I am almost always available in case you need to, for example, point out that mods can't reply to comment flags and that you disagree that answers-as-comments are not useless despite an actual answer covering the same material being present. To me, at least, that would be a textbook example of great moderation.
    – TylerH
    Apr 25, 2019 at 19:05
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Here goes an unsolicited third opinion.

Your answer is essentially equivalent to the comments by Wiktor Stribiżew and Andrea Corbellini (though I like the phrasing of Andrea's comment slightly better than yours). That means there might have been a decent case for removing the comments as "No Longer Needed". However, reconstituting the history of the Q&A from your question here and Cody's answer leads me to conclude that you went about it the wrong way, and the outcome being discussed here is unsurprising. Allow me to explain:

  • Though you made your answer community wiki, the answer itself does not mention Wiktor and Andrea's comments. Doing that would have made your intent clearer (in addition to being good attribution etiquette). Changing the opening sentence to "As Wiktor Stribiżew and Andrea Corbellini have pointed out in comments, [...]" would have been enough (the link to the regex reference could have been inlined into the following sentence).

  • In a similar way, while your first custom flag pointedly notes that "there exists an answer posted as an answer", it doesn't mention your answer was intended to replace the comments. I believe something like "I have posted an answer equivalent to the comments by Wiktor Stribiżew and Andrea Corbellini, and so it is fine to remove those comments now" would have been far more likely to lead to the outcome you desired. As it actually happened, you were, in effect, asking the mods to make a snap judgement on the technical equivalence between answer and comments, when the responsibility of clarifying that falls squarely on the shoulders of the flag caster.

The above is sufficient to explain why I believe Cody's handling of the flags was appropriate. It is worth noting a few more things about the surrounding events:

  • There are several circumstances which make it reasonable to post answer-like content in comments. One of them is believing a question should be closed as "Off-topic/Typo" or as a duplicate and posting an answer-like comment to clarify that. Wiktor believes the question should be closed, and so he chose to point out the problem with the OP's code in a comment. It is fine to disagree with his reasoning, but the discussion about whether the question should indeed be closed as a typo is completely separate from that about whether Wiktor was justified in posting the comment. That being so, your "[...] especially by users who ought to know better" remark feels out of place.

  • By the way, "For your benefit en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typographical_error" does come across as very condescending. That that comment was posted after a chat discussion with Wiktor doesn't really change that.

  • Lastly, it seems quite clear to me that casting a custom flag isn't a very good pathway for disputing the outcome of a custom flag, or asking for an explanation thereof. Even accounting for you believing that mods could address comments to you via comment flags, posting your Meta question right after the first custom flag was declined would have been more appropriate.

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  • 2
    I knew the solution to the issue independently of the comments from Andrea and Wiktor; it just so happens that the solution was a very straightforward one, necessitating quite similar explanations. I made it a CW out of an abundance of deference, but I didn't rely on their comments to write the answer, so providing attribution would've been inaccurate/incorrect. As for the custom flag, it's true, I could have made it more explicit in the flag dialog that the effective content of the answer directly superseded the content of the comments, but unfortunately I was out of allowed characters, IIRC.
    – TylerH
    Apr 26, 2019 at 13:41
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    Regarding custom flag being a good pathway or not, I didn't (and still don't, after seeing Cody's reasoning) think a Meta Q is necessary to address why the flags were declined, considering first that the actual reasoning amounts to, basically, "I disagree that the comments are no longer needed", and second that, when I raised the third flag asking why the first two were declined, I was thinking there must have been some technical reason for why the flags were declined, as it is so glaringly clear that the comments are in fact not needed. [1/2]
    – TylerH
    Apr 26, 2019 at 13:44
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    Had I known that mods are not able to leave a note/reason when handling comment flags, I definitely would not have raised the third flag, and may or may not have asked a question on Meta at all. [2/2]
    – TylerH
    Apr 26, 2019 at 13:50
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    @TylerH On CW: what you did is understandable, though it feels somewhat of a half measure to me. I would either have gone all the way and made it CW with explicit attribution, or not made it CW (which would have been entirely justified here, as you came up with the answer independently).
    – duplode
    Apr 26, 2019 at 20:38

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