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As mentioned by Artie, the case of BCnrd is relevant to this. This has been discussed before http://tea.mathoverflow.net/discussion/950/questions-spoiled-by-comments/. Briefly, the consensus reached at that time was that this behavior is discouraged but not unacceptable. It is also perfectly appropriate for another user to expand the comments into a (CW) answer, as Harry Gindi did for several BCnrd nswrs.
Given this question, one is then led to ask, "why do people who complain about leaving answers as comments then delete such answers once they are given?".
And editing the old one was impossible for some reason :)
If you want to bring a post to the top, Gene, just edit the original question or an answer to it. Be careful not to do it too many times to avoid turning it into a community wiki question.
Gene, what I've sometimes done if I feel that someone's comment deserves to be promoted to answer status is post that comment as an answer, in my name but in CW mode and with credit to the commenter. I feel this is acceptable. I've seen other experienced users do the same.
I'd rather the person ask me in the comments if I would move it to an answer than have the other person post it as an answer without asking.
Yes, people do that too, and I agree it's polite to do so. But if a comment just sits there for a long time, then under the present software, a commenter will not be alerted in mail to the fact that someone has made that request of him or her. Some things about MO are really inefficient!
There are times I purposefully leave things as comments to avoid rebumping the question
But if the question is never answered except in comments, then the MO bot will eventually come around anyway and bump it to the front page. (Hm, is that how it works? or does this happen only if no answer is ever accepted?) Anyway, I believe it's much more in line with the spirit of MO to give good answers (not just comments) to good questions.
So I've heard, Michael. Say, when is this supposed to take place?
@Patricia: I appreciate your thoughtfulness, both here and at MO. Actually, I think a reference to a paper, or a lightly tendered suggestion, can make for an excellent answer, often better than a highly detailed answer. But I understand these are sometimes tough calls.
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