I'm a little surprised to find myself explaining most of the following to someone with a 6-digit reputation score (a top 0.01% user of the site!), with dozens of gold badges, who has been around since mere months after the creation of the site. However, you have been very polite and understanding in asking about this, and clearly do care about following site policies - it just appears that answering a lot of questions (and asking a few questions that were quite well received, including some with what look like really impressive self-answers) doesn't necessarily result in understanding what we want the site to be. (The current understanding has also evolved a fair bit over time, although I feel like we'd all be in a much better place if that understanding had been in place from the beginning. I know I would have treated many of my old answers much differently.) So, I will be firm below, but I don't want to give the impression of berating you, as I sometimes do with other experienced users on Meta. Per the standard I have adopted, boldface emphasis below is purely for summary; italic emphasis is for other things that need to be stressed. Onward: > While such a comment is obviously of a transient nature, *it is vital that the asker see it* before it gets removed. **No, it really isn't**. It's not even the slightest bit important here. We have no way to know whether the asker will keep the page open and see such a comment within the next few minutes, or will go to sleep and see it the next day, or will never come back at all. But more importantly, editing answers to improve them is about **the answer, not** any specific individual who found fault with the previous version of the answer (including its author). As you correctly note, the comment is of a transient nature. *Ideally, all* comments are of a transient nature, because this is **not a discussion forum**. > The asker never learns of the update and may not get their problem solved. If the asker doesn't come back unprompted, that is the asker's fault for not having sufficient interest in the update to the answer. And again, **answers here are not about solving any specific person's "problem"**; they are about *answering a question* - the one asked at the top of the page. Solving problems is only incidental, the bait used to prompt people to ask questions that are actually meaningful. (It's apparently not very good at getting high-quality questions, but sites that don't make *some* concessions to quantity over quality don't seem to survive very long.) Answer content should only be customized insofar as the asker's phrasing represents a typical misconception, or insofar as the specific details of a MRE (*which should still be minimal and appropriately decontextualized*) make it easier to talk about the underlying issue. > Future readers see only the asker's outdated comment which no longer matches the answer, amounting to a confusing distraction. Yes; the comment no longer matches the answer, because you fixed the answer according to the only purpose (as far as we are concerned) that the comment serves. As above, comments are inherently of a transient nature. **You should therefore flag these comments as "No Longer Needed"**. This is a *textbook case* for the flag. > I don't know the cause **It's a).** Unless the comment happens to match very specific regexes, which are not really aimed at this particular situation, the comment needs to be flagged and then acted on by a moderator. Even if the comment does match a regex, it still requires a flag to be removed, the system only takes the moderator's approval out of the loop. (We aren't particularly concerned about this, because again, comments are supposed to be transient.) > If (a), I suggest abstaining from flagging such comments unless either a *reasonably long* time has passed or you've personally verified that the recipient has seen the comment I will not do this, because: * It would greatly slow me down on an important curation task; * It would falsely encourage the perception of the site as a discussion forum. > As a commenter - especially an inexperienced one - it is reasonable to expect to be notified *automatically*. If this were a discussion forum, that would be a reasonable expectation. As I said above, however, this **is not a discussion forum**. We do provide a very rudimentary chat feature for dealing with some special cases; and it is possible to attach messages to certain flags that will be seen by moderators; and we are experimenting with more direct feedback on questions with the new Staging Ground in the hope of getting better quality first questions. However, **outside of specifically designated special cases, there is no reasonable expectation that ordinary sees any kind of user-targeted, meta-level message, ever**. We don't have a DM system, by very carefully considered design.