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Why are some comments collapsed on Quora?
Quora users. Quora users have the ability to downvote comments, which will result in them being collapsed if they receive enough downvotes (sometimes, it only takes one downvote to collapse a comment, btw.) Quora users can also report content they perceive as a violation of Quora’s policies.
How do I collapse comments in Word?
Hiding comments using Display for Review
- Click the Review tab in the Ribbon.
- In the Tracking group, click Display for Review. A drop-down menu appears.
- Select No Markup or Original to hide the markup area, including comments.
How do you keep comments expanded in Word?
Start by clicking the “Review” tab. In the Tracking section of the Review tab, click the Display for Review drop-down list at the top of the section and select the “All Markup” option. If you don’t see the drop-down list, you may need to widen the Word window.
How do I make comments not collapse in Word?
Starts here2:39[HOW TO] Hide/Unhide or Collapse/un-Collapse COMMENTS …YouTube
Most people don’t produce content on social networks, and that includes leaving comments. According to the 90-9-1 (and the more recent 70-20-10) rule for participation inequality, the majority of online users are ‘lurkers’ who just take in information and never actively participate with opinions.
What is the difference between a comment and a like?
Comments from friends – even brief ones – are perceived as social support and increase our psychological well-being. To have beneficial effect, personalized comments must come from close ties, or people who are our friends in real life. Likes, in comparison, are easy-to-produce one-click communication that doesn’t enhance well-being.
Do user comments influence reader interpretation of information?
Uncivil user comments, especially on less familiar topics, influence how readers interpret the preceding information. A study by Ashley Anderson et al. analyzed people’s opinions on nanotechnology after reading an article together with fictitious comments.
Do first comments on a Facebook post influence next comments?
A study (summed up here) by professors Lev Muchnik, Sinan Aral and Sean Taylor falsified the first comments under 100.000 posts and discovered that people left more positive comments if the first comment was positive. If the first comment was negative, there was a higher chance of negative subsequent comments.