@OlegValteriswithUkraine I’ve occasionally had such minor edits declined simply because they’re deemed too minor, and a waste of reviewers’ time. As far I undershand, that’s a valid rejection reason to apply for minor edits.
@Andreasdetestscensorship I consider this a misinterpretation of the rule, to be honest. My reading has always been that the efit should fix as many issues with a post as possible, and if there are glaring issues still present, it should be rejected, otherwise - approved. If you had edits rejected only because they are "too minor", I'd consider them bad reviews.
In this case, however, the reason I want an override is simple - the preview didn't show me the full exceprt, so I mistakenly thought they fixed the link while doing nothing to provide guidance. Upon opening the review "for review" as I usually do, I realized that the guidance was there, just not shown...
I do sometimes leave glaring issues behind, but only because I’m unable to fix them. If I consider the question not close-worthy, but in need of edits, I do suggest edits even when leaving behind large issues. I tend to also leave a comment, and ask for the author to clarify it.
Well, tag wikis are a bit different from posts, though, I assume. There’s always been higher barrier to editing tags.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Indeed a misinterpretation. If we reword the wrong interpretation, it becomes glaringly obvious: "Incorrect posts should not be edited, if the changes are small". Which makes no actual sense. If somebody mistyped a word or two, then they should be fixed. If there is nothing else to change, then there is nothing else to change.
The rule is for suggested edits that only change a word or two amongst ten different errors, for example
@Andreasdetestscensorship I also have a pragmatic approach to handling "too minor" edits: even if the edit doesn't fix all the issues with the post, I just ask myself a question "is the edit an overall improvement?" - if it is, I hit approve (and usually "improve" to fast-track it), otherwise - reject.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine I have a similar rule of thumb - the edit should be one whole unit of fixes. For example, fixing spelling mistakes. Not fixing some but leaving "i" instead of "I" in a bunch of places. If the edit could have also changed the title to be more descriptive, that's a separate unit of work for me. I wouldn't require the suggestion to do both.
Also, even if an edit doesn't cover 100% of the things that should be changed, I go with "does it take me less time to reject and edit or to improve and edit" and go with that. Again, as a guiding principle.
Occasionally, I reject and edit because an editor really, really, should not have made that suggestion. Even if "Improve edit" might take less time to fix.
@VLAZ sounds reasonable. Although I'd be inclined to reject an edit even if it is a single unit of fixes if, overall, it omits too much. Although I won't reject just because the edit forgets to remove "thanks". I will, though, if it also (in addition to that) forgets to fix formatting all over the post.
@VLAZ Yup, same. Commonly known as "making a judgement call". You know, what reviewers should be doing.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine If the post is in some way useful, but has a lot of issues, it should be fine to divide them between us. There's no point why a single person has to fix every problem. Sometimes I just can't understand a paragraph, while others can. Better leave it for somebody else to fix it, than provide my own broken interpretation.
@Andreasdetestscensorship oh, it doesn't imply that a suggestion should fix all issues with the post. But if it skips way too many obvious issues, it is guaranteed to get a reject vote from me (most likely - a "reject and edit" with a comment to the editor in the edit summary).
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Even if it also fixes a lot of issues? But, well, I guess this case is rare for an actually useful post. Containing this many problems likely means the post should just be closed/deleted instead.
What I mean is that if a suggestion skips over "thanks in advance" while fixing a substantial amount, that's no reason to reject, IMO. On the other hand, if it just removes it while the post remains in a shitty state, I'll reject it.
@Andreasdetestscensorship kinda :)
Lots of reviewers probably need that repeated a couple of times, though.
"dumb" application of rules is just as harmful as not following them, IMO.
Already did it :) Not a shitty one, though - just an attempt at a mega-canonical. Which got me dragged to Meta in the first place, and... I liked it here :)
@ZoestandswithUkraine yeah, it kind of is, although copied content usually stands out well enough to be able to spot it at a glance in my experience. Btw, this exact report is more of a test for an extension I am making to my userscript for suggested edits reviews - got too tired of manually reporting reviews...
yup, it's definitely a rewrite, but we don't count rewrites as copied content, IIRC
@OlegValteriswithUkraine wish the API provided an endpoint for review votes, it's hella annoying to parse the utterly non-semantic markup of the status notice
Oh, if you see the full list of revisions OP apparently added an age. Well, two. I suspect you edited it out but probably there was an edit in between.
That is grounds for flagging, though. I’m not particularly a fan of excluding children from something that isn’t inappropriate to them, but I do see reasons for it too.
Yep. Especially when your teaching assistants instruct your poor group members to paste something into your project’s configuration files, that starts breaking everything two weeks later. I fucking hate them sometimes. It took me 40 hours to track down.
Ok, maybe not 40. Perhaps just 30.
Like, come on, don’t tell them it’s the right solution when it’s wrong.
My first semester at the university, I had a group project with 4 others. They managed to make me do all the work. Eventually, I had enough, told my professor to take me off the group, and got an extension. I got an A, but this project damaged my results in other courses. The submissions were open for everybody to look at, so I looked at the final work that the other 4 delivered. They took credit for everything I did.
@ZoestandswithUkraine Make sure you document who does what, if somebody puts in considerably more effort than the others.
In uni, other people not doing stuff/being skilled enough to do lots of stuff means I work more. In a work context, it's bound to work hours
I might have to do more overall work on the project, but it's my job, and doesn't negatively affect anything else without being expensive for my company (because overtime is expensive)
@Andreasdetestscensorship Obviously, not everyone in the workforce is skilled, so there are stories, but the implications of it are not as bad
Or rather, the implications of it aren't as bad for me
expected: rejected (no improvement: dead links should be replaced, not deleted) actual: rejected (1 approver, 2 rejectors) link: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/34452358
> Edit summary: replaced deutsch link to english one