You are not logged in. Your edit will be placed in a queue until it is peer reviewed.
We welcome edits that make the post easier to understand and more valuable for readers. Because community members review edits, please try to make the post substantially better than how you found it, for example, by fixing grammar or adding additional resources and hyperlinks.
Required fields*
- 6Yes! Although I would rather see them all as individual notifications, grouped in a tree, that you could choose to mark as read/unread all at once or individually.TylerH– TylerH2022-11-29 15:49:30 +00:00Commented Nov 29, 2022 at 15:49
- Came to MSE to report this as a bug, especially because once you click on that one consolidated notification and read the comment, another unread notification will appear in the dropdown and this will continue until you've clicked each of the new unread notifications for comments on the same post in turn.WBT– WBT2023-01-11 22:14:18 +00:00Commented Jan 11, 2023 at 22:14
- 1now, when marking the newest notification as read, all related notifications are also marked as read. For now we're not planning to add a number of consolidated notifications in the inbox, but I agree it'd be nice to have. I hope that solves the problem!marrados– marrados StaffMod2023-06-29 09:04:46 +00:00Commented Jun 29, 2023 at 9:04
Add a comment |
How to Edit
- Correct minor typos or mistakes
- Clarify meaning without changing it
- Add related resources or links
- Always respect the author’s intent
- Don’t use edits to reply to the author
How to Format
- create code fences with backticks ` or tildes ~ ```
like so
``` - add language identifier to highlight code ```python
def function(foo):
print(foo)
``` - put returns between paragraphs
- for linebreak add 2 spaces at end
- _italic_ or **bold**
- indent code by 4 spaces
- backtick escapes
`like _so_` - quote by placing > at start of line
- to make links (use https whenever possible) <https://example.com>[example](https://example.com)<a href="https://example.com">example</a>
How to Tag
A tag is a keyword or label that categorizes your question with other, similar questions. Choose one or more (up to 5) tags that will help answerers to find and interpret your question.
- complete the sentence: my question is about...
- use tags that describe things or concepts that are essential, not incidental to your question
- favor using existing popular tags
- read the descriptions that appear below the tag
If your question is primarily about a topic for which you can't find a tag:
- combine multiple words into single-words with hyphens (e.g. stack-overflow), up to a maximum of 35 characters
- creating new tags is a privilege; if you can't yet create a tag you need, then post this question without it, then ask the community to create it for you