I spent some time in the "First Questions" queue the other day, as well as fielding a number of posts from new users in my tags during the last week...
And I found myself regularly telling the newbies that in order to ensure a person they were replying to in comments gets notified, they need to precede the display name with @
.
This is (as far as I know) something very specific to Stack Overflow, so we can't expect those new to the site to know this. It's also very important for helping questions get edited into an answerable state. People respond, and get no interaction back from those who've requested more information and would (supposedly) be able to answer based on the request. This may not be as big an issue in high-traffic tags, but it certainly is in low-traffic ones.
I propose that "New Contributors" are automatically shown a "hint" about how to "ping" others when writing a comment.
(And the prompt should probably have a "Don't show this again" checkbox when the newbie feels they've learned this aspect of the site.)
(See also my other request for helping newbies to learn about the edit link.)
@
syntax is not at all unique to SO. It's used at tons of social media and communication platforms, to the point where even Merrian Webster has been writing articles about it. But I guess that means it provides even more value to teach people about it if it's a new concept to them since they might benefit from it many other places.@
lying here and there. No such hints on SE. 2 There's no reason to believe that all SE users know how twitter works. you need exception? Here I am. Never used Twitter.