45

I recently stumbled across a question about some setting in NetBeans.

The original poster of the question had edited (revision 3) their post with the following:

PLEASE DO NOT UPVOTE LenglBoy ANSWER AS IT WAS EXACTLY WHAT I WAS NOT LOOKING FOR

Is it okay to explicitly give this kind of advice?


Related:
37
  • 80
    No, you can't tell people how to use their votes.
    – Thom A
    Oct 4, 2021 at 9:19
  • 4
    For reference, I have rolled back that edit in the post now (as @JeanneDark says, it's fluff or noise, so doesn't belong there), but the revision can be seen here.
    – Thom A
    Oct 4, 2021 at 9:20
  • 49
    The other problem with the text is it just rude, in my opinion, @MCEmperor . The OP is SHOUTING at some one, which is just uncalled for. I also find it very odd that they (the OP) came back about 2 years later to add that edit.
    – Thom A
    Oct 4, 2021 at 9:23
  • 11
    "Oh okay, it is exactly what I am looking for but because it did not help you I will not upvote it then". NO! The entire premise of the demand is ludicrous, the product of a person who completely misses the point of the site.
    – Gimby
    Oct 4, 2021 at 10:26
  • 12
    I frequently see people commenting below answers that this was not what they were looking for (without any voting recommendation and all caps letters though). It's okay, especially if accompanied with additional arguments why it's not what they were looking for. Potentially it hints how the question could be improved (in case it was a bit unclear). Oct 4, 2021 at 10:35
  • 4
    The advise is quite indelicate because the question is self-answered (and eventually accepted)
    – Vega
    Oct 4, 2021 at 11:46
  • 2
    Now the answer got meta-effected and 6 new upvotes have appeared. I wonder how many of those voters actually tried it. Seems like most voters don't actually check whether an answer works, and with people coming from meta, I would expect the rates to be even worse. Oct 4, 2021 at 16:13
  • 6
    That answer really is just some guy telling the questioner an approach the questioner already knew about and linked to, which the questioner says doesn't work. The answerer's claims about the effects in the comments suggest they changed from 1.7 to 1.8, which is the exact opposite of what the questioner is trying to do. Oct 4, 2021 at 16:19
  • 2
    It may be worth noting that the OP did leave a comment explaining the problem with the answer at the time it was posted. I can’t even guess at what prompted the edit to the question; I don’t see anything in the timelines that would hint at it.
    – BSMP
    Oct 4, 2021 at 16:26
  • 4
    @Nick: The question explicitly is about switching to 1.7. It would have been better if they included that in the title, but it's still in the body, and not all question details need to be in the title to be part of the question. Oct 4, 2021 at 16:28
  • 5
    @Nick: No, it's not just an example. It's crucial to the question, because (according to the questioner, and it seems likely that they're correct, judging by resources I've found on what the netbeans_jdkhome setting does) changing the netbeans_jdkhome setting to a 1.7 JDK makes Netbeans fail on startup. The question is about finding something that works for Java 1.7. Oct 4, 2021 at 16:31
  • 3
    @Nick: No they're not. They are asking how to make Java projects they're working on run in 1.7. Netbeans can do that, even when Netbeans itself is running on 1.8, but it looks like this has to be configured on a per-project level. There doesn't seem to be a way to set 1.7 as the default. Oct 4, 2021 at 16:42
  • 2
    @Nick: Netbeans uses the JDK it's running on as the default JDK for new projects, so changing netbeans_jdkhome changes both Netbeans's own JDK and the new project JDK. See 6.8 Setting the Target JDK. Oct 4, 2021 at 16:59
  • 3
    @jpmc26 there is a big difference with saying why you voted the way you did and telling people to not upvote something. The former is fine (though for downvotes be prepared for backlash by less mature users), the latter is not; again, I can and will use my votes how I want to, not how someone else tells me to.
    – Thom A
    Oct 5, 2021 at 11:00
  • 3
    Because you think it's ok, @jpmc26 ... Clearly if you don't like me telling you how to vote, you don't actually feel the same way as your comments say you do... Which just evidences my actual point. Plus, both the question and answer are also against being told how to vote, and so by definition you should be voting against them (like I told you to).
    – Thom A
    Oct 5, 2021 at 13:37

6 Answers 6

93

No, it's fluff that doesn't belong in a post. Feel free to remove it.

Questions and answers are also not just for the OP. Stack Overflow is not a free help desk but wants to become a library of programming knowledge for many people.

The OP can mark the answer that helped them most by accepting it, but others can vote as they wish (the tooltip provides guidance) and whether an answer was useful to the OP or not may not be relevant for other users at all. If another answer was useful to you, feel free to upvote it, even if it was not the OP's main choice (for sure, I'm just referring to answers that meet our quality standards).

The accepted answer may be wrong, bad practice, not well-explained, overly specific (eg. code-only), outdated (eg. see Outdated Answers: accepted answer is now unpinned on Stack Overflow), etc.

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  • 10
    I'm not understanding why you are putting any emphasis on accepted answers here ("The accepted answer may be..."). In this specific case the accepted answer was posted by the OP, and was correct. The issue that frustrated the OP was that a completely incorrect answer that ignored the question and the OP's comments was upvoted. That OP must have their hair on fire right now because the meta effect has caused the wrong and bad answer to be upvoted even more! The final paragraph of your answer is fine in principle, but applies to all answers, and not just the accepted one.
    – skomisa
    Oct 4, 2021 at 17:34
  • 2
    @skomisa Given that sentence follows a paragraph specifically discussing the accepted answer, it feels like it's elaborating on that point, rather than making a general point about answers.
    – M. Justin
    Oct 4, 2021 at 19:48
  • @M.Justin Well we will have to agree to disagree, because I don't think the preceding paragraph was "specifically discussing the accepted answer" at all. On the contrary, it was making the point that others are free to upvote any answer regardless of the OP's views or accepted answer. Therefore it makes more sense that the comments in the final paragraph should apply to all answers rather than just the accepted answer.
    – skomisa
    Oct 4, 2021 at 22:43
  • 3
    @skomisa The preceding paragraph mentioned that the OP was free to accept any answer -- not just the top-voted one -- and the last paragraph simply elaborates on why it's important to keep "accept" and "votes" different and have votes be independent of the OP's opinion of what the most useful answer is. Oct 5, 2021 at 11:21
  • @skomisa Answers and questions don't 'belong' to the original asker. All questions (and answers) are but Shadows of True Platonic Questions and different people may derive different utility (or other value) from the same answers or the same question. Oct 7, 2021 at 2:32
25

No, this is thoroughly in bad taste. If the OP wants to post "I'm afraid this isn't what I was looking for, please read my question more carefully" as a comment on an answer, that's fine. If that deters people from upvoting that answer, also fine. Telling people how to vote is never okay. Editing the question to contain complaints, natter, or anything else that isn't really the question: also not okay.

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    I don't think it's fair to never tell people how to vote. For instance, we should tell them not to serial upvote, engage in voting fraud, use the voting system for purposes other than it's intended, etc.
    – M. Justin
    Oct 4, 2021 at 19:54
  • 2
    eh, every rule has exceptions if you poke at it enough.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 4, 2021 at 19:59
  • 2
    @KevinB even the rule you just stated? :P
    – lucidbrot
    Oct 5, 2021 at 7:18
  • 2
    Rule 184: This rule has no exceptions
    – OrangeDog
    Oct 6, 2021 at 7:46
  • 1
    @M.Justin ordinary users can't see if someone is doing any of those things, which makes "reminding" them not to basically an accusation.
    – hobbs
    Oct 6, 2021 at 14:37
16

No, it's not ok.

If the question asker wants to inform others that an answer is not what they were looking for, they can downvote such answer. When you encounter such information being added to the main post, please roll back/edit it out.

We can't tell other users how to vote. We should not encourage voting on any given post, whether it's up or down. You may encourage people to use their voting privileges when it's appropriate, but don't tell them which posts to vote on.

2
  • "Furthermore, we can't tell other users how to vote. We should not encourage voting either way on any given post." Do you realize how much content on Meta would have to be deleted if that were correct?
    – jpmc26
    Oct 5, 2021 at 3:06
  • @jpmc26 Content on Meta may not always align with other content on Meta, for multiple reasons. And regardless, that isn't a reason to delete that content.
    – E_net4
    Oct 5, 2021 at 11:42
9

For your specific example, it had the following problems (rev 3):

  • It appended an "all caps" message to the question, which on the Internet is considered shouting and borderline rude in some cases. It is very distracting from the rest of the question, so it sorts as what SO refers to as "fluff".
  • It adds nothing to the question itself.
  • Promoting/anti-promoting certain answers from the question itself is very poor style. The person asking a question is supposed to promote an answer by accepting it and up-voting it. And optionally down-vote unhelpful or incorrect answers, ideally leaving a comment about why it is wrong or unhelpful.

This harmful edit was correctly removed with a rollback (rev 4).


In general, it might be acceptable to promote other answers from another ("competing") answer. I often do this when I just want to append something to an otherwise good answer, or leave some information related to the question, which in itself isn't a complete answer.

4

There are a lot of comments and answers here claiming that telling people how to vote is somehow wrong or unacceptable. That position is absurd. The problem is not whether you try to influence people's votes, but how.

Consider the following comment:

This answer suffers from SQL injection vulnerabilities because it constructs the query using string concatenation rather than parameterizing the inputs. This is a terrible practice that should never show up in production code.

Now consider this comment:

This answer suffers from SQL injection vulnerabilities because it constructs the query using string concatenation rather than parameterizing the inputs. This is a terrible practice that should never show up in production code; this answer deserves to be downvoted.

Is there really any difference between these two comments? No, there really is not. They are both encouraging you to downvote the post and avoid its advice by pointing out a severe problem, and they are both encouraging you to use our site's mechanic for rating content appropriately. One of them just does so implicitly while the other makes the action you should take explicit. That is fine. There is nothing wrong with providing a substantive response and encouraging people to take an appropriate action in light of that information.

So what is and is not an appropriate way of influencing other people's votes? It's pretty simple.

  1. Make sure your response is more than just telling people to vote. Provide a substantive reason for why they should vote a particular way.
  2. Make sure you provide it in the correct location. On the main site, it does not ever belong in a question or answer post (even an answer that explicitly addresses major problems in a competing answer). On Meta, it only belongs in a post that is intended to provide specific guidance about expected behavior; such posts should usually include specific policy or analysis that will allow users to generalize the behavior to many posts. A comment responding to a particular post is also a place this belongs, assuming you can fit the explanation in the comment with it.
  3. Provide quality content. Just because you have decided that you need to provide some information to influence people's votes doesn't mean your content gets to be low quality. All of our quality expectations still apply. On top of the correctness of the substance, this means it should use good formatting, punctuation, grammar, and word choice. This also means you shouldn't let a tangent about voting prevent you from improving your own question or answer. If an answer is unhelpful, consider whether the question can be clarified or otherwise improved to explain why that approach doesn't work, or whether it would be appropriate to address the problems of the other approach in your competing answer. This may be useful information even if a bad answer is eventually deleted.
  4. Save explicit voting recommendations for extreme cases. If you go around telling people how to vote on every post you see or decide to comment on, it's annoying. Save it for common but catastrophic errors where the author really should know better but many do not (like SQL injections) or for solutions that are absolutely brilliant but weren't obvious. Most of the time, it's enough to just point out the negative or positive qualities of a post directly, and voting doesn't need to be mentioned.
  5. Don't be rude. There's a difference between being harsh and rude. Some circumstances warrant being a little harsh, but don't cross the line. (Yes, what constitutes "rude" is subjective and a matter of debate that I won't get into, but for the moment, let's just agree there is some line you shouldn't cross.)

How does your specific example stack up against that?

  • It's almost all caps. Very poor style.
  • It's in the question, rather than a comment on the answer.
  • It doesn't provide a substantive reason. (The user does provide substantive objections in direct comments on the answer, but not in the content you quoted.)

So yes, the specific content you quoted needs to go. But not because it tells people how to vote. It's because of the bad substance, style, and location.

3
  • In this case, it would be ok for the question to say something like "setting netbeans_jdkhome= in the .conf doesn't help because $reasons". Even if that's done as an edit in response to an answer (which is maybe answering a different question, or just a wrong guess or misinterpretation of the problem). It's best for the question not to even mention that an answer suggested that (so deleting the answer wouldn't invalidate part of the question), just say what the non-viable solution was in a non-complainy way like you would if it was something you'd thought of and ruled out before asking. Oct 7, 2021 at 4:26
  • So the distinction I'm making is that I agree with you that a comment under an answer pointing out something is dangerous and needs to be downvoted is fine. And agreed that voting discussion shouldn't ever appear in the question. But technical discussion in the question can if necessary be placed in a way that lets readers connect the dots and vote if they actually look at what the question and answer are saying. That's what stops the question from being a bully pulpit against answers that don't solve the question the way the querent wanted, for reasons that weren't stated in the question. Oct 7, 2021 at 4:33
  • 1
    @PeterCordes Right. This doesn't preclude clarifying the question in response to an unhelpful answer. Any improvements to the substance of a post are always welcome, irrespective of the situation with voting and other posts.
    – jpmc26
    Oct 7, 2021 at 5:31
-41

It is perfectly tok to advice users that the answer is wrong

This isn't an outdated answer as it didn't work at the time and now it works.

I also don't see why the comment was deleted as it doesn't is against the rules

As always here truth and divergent meanings get bashed.

Why must q comment that tells TT bat a answer is crap be deleted. There is no cause. The post and comm not are five years old and a lot of water got down then drain. So what does it care if five years that does go. The answer has the highest count and would be tested.

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    If one want to comment on a post, one can do so by posting a an actual comment on the post. But even then, advising (or even just commenting) on voting is simply inappropriate. The paragraph was deleted because it was noise, and we remove noise from posts. Not because it was "against the rules".
    – yivi
    Oct 4, 2021 at 9:49
  • 8
    If the OP wanted to state that the answer that they referenced wasn't helpful, they should have posted a comment that stated it; perhaps something like "This answer references the link that I included in my question, but doesn't provide an alternative solution, which is what I am looking for. As such it doesn't answer my question." If the OP wanted, they could also/instead downvote said answer as "not useful". Editing their question with such noise to SHOUT at the user who posted the answer is far from appropriate.
    – Thom A
    Oct 4, 2021 at 10:03
  • 12
    "It is perfectly OK to advise users that the answer is wrong." - yes, but NOT in the post! Warnings about accuracy should be reflected by votes and comments, and your answer here is a perfect example of what should happen. It would not be appropriate to add "PLEASE DO NOT UPVOTE nbk's ANSWER AS IT WAS EXACTLY WHAT I WAS NOT LOOKING FOR" to the question, or even for OP to edit it into your answer, but it's perfectly fine for your answer to receive downvotes and comments pointing out what parts you're wrong about
    – Zoe is on strike Mod
    Oct 4, 2021 at 13:25
  • 4
    Also, I just realized that this answer reeks of not reading into the situation; it was never a comment, it was a revision
    – Zoe is on strike Mod
    Oct 4, 2021 at 13:50
  • 6
    I don't understand why this answer has a delete vote on it. It's a valid answer, and is relevant to the question. Agreement/disagreement with the answer can be expressed through up/down votes and/or comments, not by deleting it.
    – cigien
    Oct 4, 2021 at 14:38
  • 1
    Indeed, wrong as it is, there seems to be no need to delete it.
    – yivi
    Oct 4, 2021 at 15:10
  • @yivi Advising people on voting in a comment is "inappropriate"? That's utterly ridiculous. We give voting advice all the time on Meta.
    – jpmc26
    Oct 5, 2021 at 3:02
  • @AlexeiLevenkov Any attempt to influence a person's voting pattern is an "encouragement" to vote a particular way. That includes even explaining your own reasons for voting a particular way or specifying problems or good qualities of a post. There is nothing wrong with trying to influence other people's voting patterns, either here or on the main site. Mods should not be categorically deleting any content merely on that basis, only on the basis of how much substance the post or comment contains and whether it's in the appropriate place or not.
    – jpmc26
    Oct 5, 2021 at 13:19
  • 2
    @AlexeiLevenkov It is absurd to suggest that the activity of influencing other people's votes is unacceptable. We would not be allowed to discuss anyone else's posts at all if that were the case.
    – jpmc26
    Oct 5, 2021 at 13:27
  • @SylvesterKruin What a useless distinction. There is no real difference between saying it outright and doing it without saying you are. You're still doing it either way. In fact, it's more respectful to be forthright about your intentions rather than conceal them or be deceptive. "This is because the reasons users voted a certain way may be different." So what? People disagree. That doesn't mean they shouldn't advocate for their opinion or try to change other people's minds. Changing and developing people's thoughts by sharing information is the entire point of both SO and its Meta!
    – jpmc26
    Oct 5, 2021 at 21:27
  • @SylvesterKruin In fact, you're trying to change my mind right now! And if you succeeded, it would change my voting on this question's answers! So you're trying to influence my voting. It would change nothing if you outright stated you were trying to.
    – jpmc26
    Oct 5, 2021 at 21:53
  • 3
    The site itself encourages/discourages voting, why can't it's users.
    – Kevin B
    Oct 5, 2021 at 21:56

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