I've sort of gotten into the habit of putting something like "If you have any questions, or something wasn't what you wanted, let me know! I'm open to criticism!" at the end of my answers. I did it because a lot of the questions I answer are by people new to SO, and programming in general, and I want to make sure that they feel free to ask me about things they didn't understand, or explain why something in the answer wasn't what they wanted.
And I've had varied responses to my answers, too. With some, the OP says "Thanks" in a comment, and that's it. With others, they say that this wasn't exactly what they needed, because ______. And with some, the OP accepted the answer, and then asked 3-5 more questions about it in the comments. So it's hard to tell what effect this phrase has, if any.
But now that I've read some of the Meta posts relating to "fluff", I'm starting to doubt that this is something that I should continue doing. So would this be considered:
- "Fluff", because users probably already know that they can talk to me about my answer and its content, and because it is too chatty for Stack Overflow.
- Acceptable, because it encourages new programmers and users to feel confident asking for clarification, or to feel free to criticize my answer.
- "Fluff", because it is a display of lack of confidence in my own answers, which might mean that I shouldn't be answering the question in the first place. It sounds like I'm trying to get "on their good side".
- "Fluff" because it clutters the answer, and gets in the way.