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View Full Version : Auto merge of replies.....



GRMonLI
01-Dec-2006, 02:03 AM
how come if you answer two seperate replies in a thread they get automatically merged into one answer.

I have tried responding to seperate people in the same thread with two totally different subject matters but they always get merged.

Pretty confusing.

MinionZombie
01-Dec-2006, 11:10 AM
It's an anti-spamming measure to stop people from just posting a shedload of posts like they used to be able to.

GRMonLI
01-Dec-2006, 05:09 PM
It's an anti-spamming measure to stop people from just posting a shedload of posts like they used to be able to.

I understand your answer but......

Say there is a thread about a certain movie and one person likes it and you want to answer them and agree that you like the movie....and another person hates the movie and you want to make a few valid points to discuss why it is a good movie.

When you attempt to answer both opinions it gets all mashed up together in one post with two different quotes and two different discussions.

It is very confusing and I certainly do not want to waste the time trying to follow threads and discussions that interweave and fall all over each other.

Just because something is, does not mean it works! :D

Andy
01-Dec-2006, 05:20 PM
to stop people bumping their own topics and to stop spamming in one move, the forums will not allow you to reply to your own posts.

i dont find it confusing when quote boxes seperate 2 different paragraphs at all.

MinionZombie
01-Dec-2006, 06:26 PM
Indeed, I don't find it confused, only briefly at the beginning was I slightly "huh?" but then I got into it.

If you're responding to more than one person's posts - simple, address one point by writing the person's name, e.g.:

Andy - (followed by point made)

And then the same again for the next person/people.

Also, even if they are automerged, the people who you are responding to - even if in two separate parts of the thread - will both/all get to see the response, because:

1) they'll be checking through manually
2) if they've opted to receive it, they'll be "subscribed" to the thread and will receive email response taking them to the new posts

Neil
01-Dec-2006, 07:44 PM
I found it confusing to start with, but as long as you "quote" the thread or thing you're replying to - which is to be recommended really - then it's all quite clear :)

capncnut
01-Dec-2006, 10:48 PM
Doesn't confuse me in the slightest. I would rather send one long post addressing two different quotes than reply with a couple of smaller ones. It is tidier also.

GRMonLI
02-Dec-2006, 02:04 PM
Doesn't confuse me in the slightest. I would rather send one long post addressing two different quotes than reply with a couple of smaller ones. It is tidier also.

To each their own I guess.

I would rather follow a discussion to its conclusion rather than jump around.

But hey......it is what it is.

I was curious as to why...and now I have an answer....thanks to all that replied.

Neil
02-Dec-2006, 08:19 PM
To each their own I guess.

I would rather follow a discussion to its conclusion rather than jump around.

But hey......it is what it is.

I was curious as to why...and now I have an answer....thanks to all that replied.

If you reply to someone's comment, you really should quote them to clarify who/what you are refering to...

Now, if you are replying for example to two people, be it this is in two seperate posts, or as one, the effect is exactly the same, bar a tiny bit of displaying (ie: basically a horizontal bar across between the two replies or not).

MinionZombie
02-Dec-2006, 09:50 PM
No need to quote unless you're clearly responding to someone - or if you put them name thusly:

Neil -

GRMonLI - [insert another comment]

Or, if responding to a specific part of a post, copy that part and paste it in, it is rather annoying (at least I find it to be) when people quote an [I]entire post by someone else, especially when it's not actually necessary or the quoted post is anywhere beyond low-end-medium-ish length.

lol ... I know I know, gripe gripe gripe - but I am a Scot, we've all got a bit of dour-git in our blood. :D

deadpunk
05-Dec-2006, 05:42 AM
I thought this was what the multi-quote function was designed for? To eliminate the confusion of replying to two seperate topics in one posting?