Gah, there's one user that drives me mad. Fells like this is a typical conversation (translate it on your own to the coding equivalents): - It's safer to wear a seatbelt when you're driving - That's not correct. If you're driving on ice on a lake, it's more dangerous.
Or as a real example just to prove that I'm not exaggerating: - Undefined behavior means that anything may happen - That is not true. For instance, the code still has to obey the laws of nature, so it cannot summon a demon
@RyanM Haha, that is true. But it's pretty obvious that when you say "anything may happen" you mean "anything that could happen if you wrote an arbtrary assembly program and ran it"
And I fell bad for constantly ignoring him, silently or by confronting, because sometimes he actually say good things
To this answer for example https://stackoverflow.com/a/63476256/6699433 Sure, it's true, and sure, it does not seem that annoying, but also imagine thinking "YOU AGAIN" while reading the comment
@klutt OK - again, risking room rules violations (but I'm not here moderating a user) - Eric can be annoying. But he's very seldom wrong. His level of precision (when it comes to the C Standard, say) is exemplary, and something that I have never taken as a personal insult. In my experience, his comments on my answers have generally led to me improving them.
... and, after all, Stack Overflow is about getting the best, most accurate and precise answers posted. Eric is a good 'referee/moderator' (small "m") on that front.
@AdrianMole Yes, he can be really annoying. Also, you're correct that he is seldom wrong. But while I can agree that he definitely makes posts more accurate, but I'm not sure they always get better.
@Scratte Maybe. But that would be a pretty bad argument, so if I say that, then I agree that he is right but does the opposite. Does not look good. Not an alternative for me. Then I rather ignore or conffront.
@klutt ... and, as someone who has (more than once) 'fallen foul' of his judgment, I can say, with my hand on my heart, that I now appreciate his efforts. In dots and commas are a multitude of errors made.
... On those (more recent) occasions when I have succumbed to his 'advice' and edited my answer, he has almost always then deleted his comment and a 'mysterious' upvote has appeared within minutes on that edited answer. The Community works (at least, in the C/C++ tags it does); don't fight it (you will lose); embrace it!
@AdrianMole Yeah, I understand what you mean. Unfortunately, I don't react that way to such behavior. If he would understand that his level of being literary correct is something most people finds annoying it would be a lot easier to appreciate the comments that are good.
@klutt Being 'annoying' (or not) is not what SO is about! It's about being correct. Eric is pedantic ... but, ultimately, that's what we want. (Maybe consider inviting him to this chat - up to you?) Or maybe move to the Ministry of Silly Hats?
Late to the conversation, and bringing it on topic. If you answer a question with "the best" anything, that implies it's an opinion-based question and you should cv-it. (ducks)
@AdrianMole True, but think in a broader scale. It's not unlikely that such things scare away people from answering a second time. In that case he could be a net minus. I'm not saying he is. Just stating the fact that he does not necessarily benefit the goals of higher accuracy in total.
And yes, I can see the irony in the fact that I sounded just like him :D
@DanielWiddis No.. it could also just be the mis-phrasing on a Question. They meant to ask for a solution or a how-to. They accidentally put "the best".
@Scratte That is true, and I'm not afraid if he reads it. I would stand for every word. But it would be a bit rude, and highly likely pretty unpleasant for him to read, but the likelyhood that he will read this afterwards is probably very small. But if he does, he does. It's basically the same thing I write directly to him in comments anyway.