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16:40
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A: Why this edit was rejected? What should I do if the answer does not address my question fully, but I know how to make it so?

Servy Should I have posted my improvement as a separate answer instead? Yes. If you have come up with a different solution to the problem than another answerer, that you think is better, you should be posting it as your own answer, not editing someone else's answer to use your solution. I can...

Or, you just tell the author to improve their post... wait, how else it can be improved. Oh right, suggest improvements is the button name for suggesting improvements. Use it as the site owners intended.
@Braiam I know you don't like the fact that edits exist to improve other people's answers, rather than for replacing their solutions with your own solutions, but the fact remains that how you want the editing feature to work is not how it actually works. Lying to people and telling them things that are objectively not true won't change that. Editing guidelines specifically indicate that edits shouldn't be making change like this, and there's a decline reason for suggested edits for exactly this situation. As much as you wish the site was just Wikipedia, it's not.
"fact"? Try better "alternative facts". Shog, Tim Post, Jeff Atwood (the guru himself), the help center, the entire SE network doesn't do what you guys try to shove to everyone throats. This site is first a wiki. Collaborative editing is up high!
@Braiam The help center is specific in saying that edits that are making changes like this aren't appropriate. I'm aware that a few people, like Shog and Jeff don't like the fact that this is what SO evolved into in this one respect, and yet that is what the site has decided on, and that's what site policy is. You can propose that it be changed, but you can't just tell people that it's not what the policy is until you successfully convince the community that it should be changed.
@Servy can I please have an actual reference to the help center that states so?
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"The help center is specific in saying that edits that are making changes like this aren't appropriate" [citation needed] The help center, doesn't include any example of edits that aren't appropriated. They give a non-exhaustive list of common reasons to edit.
@intelfx I will save you the work. It doesn't stackoverflow.com/help/editing
@Servy "until you successfully convince the community that it should be changed" how can you convince someone that doesn't want to be convinced?
@intelfx "To clarify the meaning of the post (without changing that meaning)".
@Braiam It specifically says that edits are to clarify the meaning of posts without changing it. That you think literally all edits are appropriate, and that no edits should ever be rejected, is your own personal opinion of how you want edits to be. But that doesn't make it true. Edits are there to improve other people's answers, not to edit your own original solutions into them. If you have your own original answer to provide, you can post your own original answer.
@Braiam Well you'll need to start by explaining specifically what you want the policy to be. You'll need to explain why the site would be better off if that policy were implemented, and the problems with the current policy that it is solving. Including examples would be beneficial. I'd also suggest recognizing that the current policy is that new original solutions should be posted as new answers, not edited into someone else's answer, rather than starting from the assumption that the reverse is the case.
@Braiam Here you're not explaining why you think the site would be better if your policy were the official policy, you're just saying that the policy is what you wished it was. That's not going to convince many people. If you make a proposal to change the policy, don't do that in such a proposal.
@Servy say, then, why was policy, which was set in the first place, changed? The problem with changing the policy is that it never changed. You unilaterally decided that it wasn't the policy anymore a couple of years back when you were blaming reviewers of accepting bad reviews, to which SE responded by requiring more reviewers, but since that didn't work, you became more extreme in your demands and convinced yourself that the site never worked like that.
@Braiam I'm not the one that wrote the help center to say that edits should not change the meaning of posts. I'm not the one that wrote the suggested edit rejection reason that edits should not deviate from the post owner's intent. In fact, both of those things happened before I was even a member of the site. It was already established policy when I first joined. Given that I wasn't around, I couldn't comment on how it ended up becoming the official policy despite the original founder's vision being different. I could only guess, as I didn't experience it.
@yivi I don't see how my edit "changed the meaning" of the answer. FWIW, I did not remove any text from it.
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@intelfx You did remove a bit of text. But that's besides the point .You can change the meanining of someting by adding text instead of removing. You can add meaning that wasn't originally there. Obviously the reviewers thought so. Other users are telling you that, but you do not want to accept it. That's your prorogative. Peace, I'm out.
@Braiam Your way of "improving an answer" by adding new content makes no sense. If there's a highly voted answer, and I say "Hey, this answer can be even more helpful if I add x," where adding that information diviates from the author's intent. Here's the reason that doesn't make sense: I am saying my new information is right unilaterally, and suddenly it's in an upvoted answer, so people will see it and think it's already been verified by the community, but my addition hasn't been verified. The point is, new content needs to be put in a separate answer and judged on its own merits.
@Braiam For a more indepth explanation with references to the help pages about this and the couple exceptions to this rule, see this answer I wrote a few months back.
@intelfx You can change the meaning of someone's post by just adding text to it. Just to prove the point, if I edited your most recent comment to say, "I don't see how my edit 'changed the meaning' of the answer. FWIW, I did not remove any text from it. But I nonetheless understand that it's not appropriate for me to add new original solutions into others' answers as an edit, and that I should post them as a new answer." would you argue that I didn't change its meaning?
Oh and btw @DavyM [one of the most common pitfalls on certain platforms is the omission of error-handling from examples [...] Altering such code when the problem becomes apparent can be a boon to future readers even though it doesn't change the critical information in the answer at all. This is where judging each edit on its own merits is so important.](meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/362632/…)
@Braiam: It seems that you have a strong opinion on edits. Why not post a Meta question about it instead of arguing in Servy's inbox and see how well your expectations align with the community's?
@Braiam The key phrases are "When the problem becomes apparent" and "it doesn't change the critical information at all." To make sure there really is a problem, you should comment the information and make sure you aren't the one in the wrong, possibly bring it up in chat. Once it's apparent that there is an issue, the editing page covers what to do next: " include additional information only found in comments, so all of the information relevant to the post is contained in one place," and "correct minor mistakes or add updates as the post ages." That's in line with what Shog and I both say.

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