ANSWERS: 10
  • Long and detailed pweeze, and make them redundant and not to the point. Better yet, answer in the form of another question, not even realted to the original question. Yes. Like that. ;+
  • From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Look up long in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Long may refer to: Length, the long dimension of any object Lóng, the Chinese dragon Long (surname), a common surname Long (finance), a position in finance, especially stock markets Long (Bloody Roar), a fictional character in the video-game series Bloody Roar Long integer, a computer data type denoted by long in C programming language Long, a fielding term in cricket In geography Long, People's Republic of China, Gansu Province Redundancy may refer to: Redundant acronym syndrome syndrome Redundant church Redundancy (engineering) Redundancy (information theory) Redundancy (language) Redundancy (total quality management) Redundancy (user interfaces) Data redundancy Gene redundancy Logic redundancy Layoff, dismissal of an employee for lack of available work Redundant code, computer program code that is executed but has no effect on the output of the program Tautology (rhetoric), unnecessary repetition of meaning Database normalization, the elimination of redundancy in databases Redundant (play), by Leo Butler "Redundant" (song), a song recorded by the American rock band Green Day in 1997 ........................................... but i prefer sweet an d short
  • It really depends on the question. I know for myself, I'll sometimes expand on my answer with a personal experience that relates to it. I also like it when people give more than a simple Yes or No because I like to know why others feel the way they do. I like hearing other ideas/experiences.
  • Depends on the depth of the subject we are talking about. Sometimes, long and detailed answers are the way to go, because the question to be answered is a complex one with many issues i.e religion. I however do not like answers that do not stick to the point, and go off a tangent to another topic or issue.
  • It depends on the question.
  • It depends on the question. Sometimes, a detailed answer is more helpful than a shorter one.
  • Some questions are short and can contain the basic information other people like to elaborate and give extra facts and links. I appreciate both if I am getting facts or opinions.
  • It depends on what is appropriate. I don't like when people tell a massive story when a few words will suffice. Although I equally don't like it when people give one word answers when the question requires more depth. Like when someone asks a "Have you ever...?" type question and people simply say "yes" or "no" without even a little explanation. It's irritating, especially when you asked the question.
  • Short and to the point or I revert to TL;DR'ing 'em.
  • Get to the Point already.......unless they require a long drawn out process.

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