I was looking for something on C++ code file extension? .cc vs .cpp, and saw someone asking what to do on Windows when it comes to case-sensitivity of filenames.
Two people had answered already, with some important points, but I figured another important point (biased or not) was missing from the comments. Note: comments are not answers, they are expansions on other answers, to fill the gaps, or ask for clarifications.
I quickly got a response from a highly-ranked user, in short telling me to "shut up":
I defended my point, but asked myself: is it worth adding more noise to the noise the high-profile user already was adding? Was my comment really noise?
Back and forth, I ended up feeling/getting attacked by the user for my age and lack of experience (and indirectly lack of karma).
After this, the user decided to leave a last note claiming I was going against the guidelines for adding noise to the comments. I understand Stack Overflow as a Q&A place, where people can learn from other experienced users. My experience was simply: don't use something if you have an alternative that causes you less issues. So I added it.
The guidelines are not perfect, and that's why they are guidelines, not rules. I started nothing, I simply added a way to handle a problem.
Then, the user decided to delete their comments. I had taken screenshots of the conversation prior to the answers because I was getting heated up. I couldn't resist to answer back to their last post:
TL;DR:
Is it wrong to answer old posts? What to do when other users believe they can dictate how we should use this site? When is it okay to just "not answer back"? Should I delete my answers to their comments?
.c
and.C
, and someone asked how to deal with this on Windows. My answer: don't deal with it on Windows.