The salient points are in the updated original post, but some warrant elaboration; also, a _technological_ solution is proposed, and some points made in [Karl Knechtel's answer](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/424503/45375) are addressed. --- * The (possibly inexperienced) **asker's perspective**: * They get _automatically notified_: * when someone comments on their question. * when an answer is posted. * when responded to in a comment left on a specific answers - _unless interfered with_ * _This should be enough_: * It is unreasonable to expect everyone - especially inexperienced and occasional users - to even _know_ about the 'Follow' feature. * More importantly, having to _opt-in_ to something that should and does normally occur by default _should not be necessary_. * Even opting in may be undesirable, given the potential for a flood of _unwanted_ notifications - such as due to incidental edits. * To **spell out my workflow** in more detail: * A follow-up question / request for clarification is posted in a comment, typically, but not necessarily, by the asker. * IF AND ONLY IF addressing the comment warrants _improving the answer generally_, I do so, and leave a @-targeted "Please see my updated" comment. * _Unless interfered with due to premature deletion_, this _more often than not_ works out to everyone's satisfaction: * The asker is notified, and _directly or indirectly_ indicates that their question has been addressed: indirectly by _accepting_ the answer, or directly by confirming in another comment. (There may be a back-and-forth before reaching that point, but that is incidental - eventually, cleanup can and should occur.) * Even if there is _no_ signal from the asker, I often revisit answers and if I see that the asker can be assumed to have _seen_ my comment, I proceed to cleanup as described next. * _At that point comments can be cleaned up_, and it is certainly what I do personally: I remove mine, and I flag the asker's as "no longer needed". * _If interfered with_, as stated in the original post, the asker may never learn that their question has been answered, and a confusing comment is left behind - the net effect is _more noise_. * Also, given that an answer then won't be _accepted_, an important signal to future readers is lost. And acceptance _is_ an important signal, especially _initially_ and even longer-term in question with few views. * If the interference extends to also removing the asker's original comment, there won't be noise - but the asker still won't learn of the potential resolution, and there will still be no accepted-answer signal. **The above workflow is not for everyone, as it is time-consuming, so I suggest a _technological_ solution:** * Provide a **new flag** - available to the post owner only - labeled something like this: * "No longer needed _and notify the commenter that their comment has been addressed in an update to the answer_." * The flag would act as follows: * As with current "No longer needed" flags, a moderator would have to agree in order to get the comment removed. * _Irrespective_ of whether removal is approved, _a notification is sent to the commenter_ using a _canned message_, something like: * "You have posted a comment at `<clickable link>`, and the post owner has indicated that they have addressed your comment in an update to the question." * To be clear, this notification would occur _behind the scenes_, so that not even temporary noise in the comments is created. --- To address your answer, Karl (this won't be warm and fuzzy either, but let me stress again that I appreciated your answer and the effort you put into it): To me, it exhibits the following fallacies: * **False dichotomy**: * Pitting the individual against the community: In response to my saying that it is vital that the asker be notified of a response: * > No, it really isn't. It's not even the slightest bit important here. * This is _not_ an either-or situation, and, perhaps needless to say, the individual matters; as argued above, everyone has a _reasonable expectation_ of being notified _by default_ when responded to in a comment, especially when they're directly addressed. * **Straw man arguments**: * Arguing that SO isn't a discussion forum, despite the fact that my workflow is the very _opposite_ of treating it as such and is serving to _not_ make it devolve into that, by _reducing_ comment noise long-term - _except if the workflow is inappropriately interfered with_, which is the issue at hand. * Needlessly arguing for the following, given that it was explicitly stated (albeit differently worded) as a premise of my issue ([if the comment "warrants a response of general interest (as opposed to an incidental, ephemeral response)"). * > Answer content should only be customized insofar as the asker's phrasing represents a typical misconception [...] * To spell it out unequivocally: the updates to my answers in question are designed to be of *general* interest *and thereby also* of interest to the specific asker (which is a given), so they would _want to know_. * (Inverse) **Reductio ad absurdum**: * When your arguments about comments ("there is no reasonable expectation that ordinary users see any kind of user-targeted, meta-level message, ever") are brought to their logical conclusion, _there shouldn't even be a commenting feature_. * **Argument from authority**: * With phrases such as the ones quoted below, you're portraying yourself as an authority qualified to adjudicate such matters. * > I'm a little surprised to find myself explaining most of the following to someone with a 6-digit reputation score * > doesn't necessarily result in understanding what we want the site to be. * > I don't want to give the impression of berating you, as I sometimes do with other experienced users on Meta.