A different thing are conversation back and forths: each comment is in a new branch of the comment tree.
WTH are you trying to say?
At a wild guess, that you may upvote a comment that you support – but there’s a second part that you wouldn’t agree with. Or that people should split up their comments so that people can upvote/downvote individual parts?
Thank you. Take your 0.667 of an upvote.
Hi. I’d like to buy 51% of your stake of this upvote at 2x the current market value. This is an investment proposal and you have to accept now, I don’t have time for negotiations as I’m an important businessman conducting business.
Rest assured me and my firm will not use our majority hold on your upvote to change or sway your held beliefs or writing style. Our lawyers do advise you that we absolutely have this power, though.
Anyways, sign here please.
I hope I made it clearer by editing the post. Let me know if it’s still not clear :)
We generally take for granted “1 comment per user per comment level”
We do?
Well yeah it’s not like
You would reply twice to the same comment, generally
My post tried to convey that most people do this:
[Original post by OP about COVID-19] Comments:
- User A: "COVID-19’s symptoms can vary from person to person, and the vast majority of people do not present life-threatening symptoms. This can make it easy to conclude that COVID-19 cannot possibly kill someone [edit: here’s a source that shows that many people actually believe COVID-19 cannot possibly kill someone: statistics.net]. This is an unfortunate situation, because trusting the science can lead people to use appropriate masks and reduce its spread. [edit: added the word “appropriate” thanks to User C]
- User B: “Really? I don’t know anyone who believes COVID-19 cannot possibly kill someone”
- User A: “I responded to you by adding a source to my original comment through an edit”
- User C: “My niece used a cloth mask in the Prague metro and still got COVID-19. I suppose the type of mask matters.”
- “You’re right! I’ll edit my original comment to reflect that.”
- User D: “I’m sure you won’t reply to this comment if I say that I don’t accept science.”
- User B: “Really? I don’t know anyone who believes COVID-19 cannot possibly kill someone”
and they don’t generally do this:
[Original post by OP about COVID-19] Comments:
- User A: “COVID-19’s symptoms can vary from person to person.”
- User A: “Many people think COVID-19 cannot possibly kill someone.”
- User A: “My source for this is statistics.net”
- User B: “Really? I don’t know anyone who believes COVID-19 cannot possibly kill someone”
- User A: “I responded to you by adding a source to my original comment through another comment”
- User A: “Mask usage helps reduce the spread of COVID-19.”
- User C: “My niece used a cloth mask in the Prague metro and still got COVID-19. I suppose the type of mask matters.”
The point is that we usually don’t split our points into many comments of the same level. Levels here refer to this:
- Level 1 of a comment tree
- Level 2 of a comment tree
- Level 2 of a comment tree
- Level 3 of a comment tree
- Level 1 of a comment tree
When I say that we take that for granted, I mean that I don’t see people splitting up their comments in the same level. Neither do I see people talking about splitting up their comments. In other words, neither in practice nor in discourse do people split up their comments.
Edit: Rewrite for clarity
You may be an exception, posting each part of what you wish to say in a different comment.
I’m not and I have no idea what you’re talking about, since you edited the thread and I have no recollection of what it stated originally.
Yeah. Sorry for the lack of clarity. I edited the comment. I hope it makes sense now
- User A: "COVID-19’s symptoms can vary from person to person, and the vast majority of people do not present life-threatening symptoms. This can make it easy to conclude that COVID-19 cannot possibly kill someone [edit: here’s a source that shows that many people actually believe COVID-19 cannot possibly kill someone: statistics.net]. This is an unfortunate situation, because trusting the science can lead people to use appropriate masks and reduce its spread. [edit: added the word “appropriate” thanks to User C]