The signature lines you’re writing under your posts are confusing and caused me to follow your post history to understand what was going on, arriving here, so that I can now tell you adding a block of extra text to all your posts in an effort to be terse seems like a lost purpose.
I preferred to count down since I would like to keep track of how many comments remain until I’ve successfully met my commitment. If I had just wanted to accumulate an unspecified number, I would have counted up.
Just because you are counting up doesn’t mean the limit is unspecified. Indeed, your original version explicitly specified the limit in every comment.
I asked because it looked very odd to me, especially counting down using # signs. I asked in the present tense because I thought you might have a general rule, such as counting down for commitments. Here is an analogous situation: what if you are managing a crowd on a trip, so you count them at the beginning, and again at some checkpoint, to make sure you haven’t lost them. Do you count down?
The signature lines you’re writing under your posts are confusing and caused me to follow your post history to understand what was going on, arriving here, so that I can now tell you adding a block of extra text to all your posts in an effort to be terse seems like a lost purpose.
Thanks for the feedback. I’ll keep track of my 50 comments more unobtrusively. (Comment #47.)
How do you decide whether to count down or to count up?
I preferred to count down since I would like to keep track of how many comments remain until I’ve successfully met my commitment. If I had just wanted to accumulate an unspecified number, I would have counted up.
…any particular reason why you asked?
Just because you are counting up doesn’t mean the limit is unspecified. Indeed, your original version explicitly specified the limit in every comment.
I asked because it looked very odd to me, especially counting down using # signs. I asked in the present tense because I thought you might have a general rule, such as counting down for commitments. Here is an analogous situation: what if you are managing a crowd on a trip, so you count them at the beginning, and again at some checkpoint, to make sure you haven’t lost them. Do you count down?