The actual problems that I am facing is: a user (let's call him bob) has left several off-topic comments on a post, on a site where I am a moderator.
I would like to delete these comments, and also leave a comment telling the user in question to use chat instead. I could do this:
- Leave a comment:
@bob I've deleted your off-topic comments, please use [chat](http://…) for this kind of off-topic discussion.
- Delete bob's comments.
However bob would not be notified.
Ideally I would migrate bob's comments to chat, but that's not currently possible.
I'm rather in favor of leaving a public comment here, to deter others from leaving similar off-topic comments. I don't want to lock the questions, because that would prevent editing and voting.
So, what can I do here, and what should I do here?
(Recall that I'm a moderator. If that's not your case, and you see a stream off-topic comments, particularly if they're annoying you because they're on your answer, flag the post and explain the situation.)
@mentions
in them) were deleted, and it makes sense that those would be tied directly to the notification in a way that the notification could also be removed. In your scenario though, as long as you left your comment, the system would have to know that bob's comment you deleted was the comment that caused the comment you posted to generate a notification for bob in the first place...which I could see it not doing.…please use [chat](http://…) for…
. I presume that you mean that you'd write(http://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/1098/french-language-and-usage)
(On French) in this case? That's not necessary, just use[chat]
- This will generate a magic link as if you'd typed the much longer[French Language and Usage Chat](http://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/1098/french-language-and-usage)
instead.