When askers provide feedback / ask for clarification on an answer of mine, and it warrants a response of general interest (as opposed to an incidental, ephemeral response), I respond by updating my answer rather than in a comment - I think this the preferable way to handle that.
Because I don't want to repeat the response in a comment, I usually just say, "@{user}, please see my update.", with no or little more context.
While such a comment is obviously of a transient nature, it is vital that the asker see it before it gets removed.
If it gets removed prematurely, everyone loses:
The asker never learns of the update and may not get their problem solved.
Future readers see only the asker's outdated comment which no longer matches the answer, amounting to a confusing distraction.
Anecdotally, I've seen many of my "Please see my update" comments disappear not long after posting, before the asker has had a chance to see them.
I don't know the cause:
- (a) "No longer needed" flaggers, with moderators obliging due to lack of context?
- (b) Some automated mechanism?
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 (as can be guessed from whether they've visited the site since).
If (b), I suggest either making the mechanism smart enough to not delete until either some time after the recipient has read the comment notification or not until a reasonably long time has passed, say two weeks.
To address the comment suggesting explicit opt-in via following an answer:
As a commenter - especially an inexperienced one - it is reasonable to expect to be notified automatically.
Even experienced users have a reasonable expectation of
@
-addressed comments reaching them.Inexperienced user may not even know of the option to follow a post.
In other words:
Don't put the burden of an additional, non-obvious step which shouldn't be necessary on someone who has already posted a comment with the implicit and reasonable expectation to be notified of reply comments.
The net effect of doing so makes the two problems described above persist.