Stack Overflow has often been characterized as a challenging platform to contribute to, sometimes seen as unfriendly. This notion has been ameliorated with a new Code of Conduct that includes expectations like:
- If you’re here to help others, be patient and welcoming.
- Be inclusive and respectful.
I recently saw a 1367 character answer ending in a friendly "Hope this helps." be edited with the sole purpose of removing that phrase. The argument was:
Stack Overflow is like an encyclopedia, so we prefer to omit these types of phrases. It is assumed that everyone here is trying to be helpful.
That makes sense in its own right, but I don't feel it is congruent with the attempted shift in making SO culture more "welcoming" and "respectful".
I know the help section on "How do I write a good answer?" says not give an answer which just says thank you. And that makes sense, but not allowing a friendly remark which takes up just 1% of the answer, seems to take it too far.
There is a reason we say these things IRL. Yes, SO questions are eventually encyclopedic in nature, but when the question is actively being worked on it is social in nature. I think minor friendly remarks like this have their place here.
Was it correct to remove the friendly remark?