Oh yes, it is quite normal to separate the clauses of a sentence with commas.
yes
comma
When joining two independent clauses with a conjunction (such as "and," "but," or "or"), use a comma before the conjunction. For example: "She finished her work, and then she went home."
Yes, when used to join two independent clauses, and as well as the other coördinating conjunctions should be preceded by a comma.
A comma splice is such a comma, when it collects two independent clauses are connected by only a comma. The following example illustrates a comma splice: the job is hard, get some rest.
A comma is typically needed before a coordinating conjunction joining two independent clauses or to separate items in a list. It is also used after introductory phrases or clauses at the beginning of a sentence.
When you combine two independent clauses, you need to separate them with a semicolon--not a comma. If you use a comma instead of a semicolon, the result is called a comma splice.
A compound sentence becomes a comma splice when two independent clauses are incorrectly joined together with just a comma, without a coordinating conjunction or proper punctuation. This creates a run-on sentence where the two ideas are not properly connected.
A comma is typically used before "but" when it connects two independent clauses. However, if "but" is joining phrases within a single sentence, a comma is not necessary.
A comma is placed before and (and all other coördinating conjunctions) when the conjunction is being used to combine two independent clauses. In the sentence "My name is Joey, and I am thirteen years old," a comma precedes the conjunction and to hold the two clauses together.
It's comma splice. A semi-colon or full stop should be used instead.
An example of two sentences written as one sentence and usually separated by a comma is "I went for a run in the morning, it felt refreshing." This structure is called a comma splice, which combines two independent clauses in a single sentence.
Use commas to separate clauses.