4:34 AM
@AdrianMole I'm having the same problem. Have you been able to resolve it yet?
@code11 Note that if an answer you downvoted is deleted, you get the rep back that the downvote cost you.
:51170780 It is preferred that such edits be evaluated by an SME. If the edit is correct and improves the post, then you're OK to approve it. If not, then it should be rejected and they should be told to leave a comment instead of an edit. In practice, most of these edits get rejected because most suggested edit reviewers are not SMEs and it doesn't scale well to require everyone to skip when they're not an SME.
@Scratte No, you aren't the only one. I have the exact same problem. It's very frustrating. I wish the "side by side" option applied to titles, too. I don't know why it doesn't. Too bad you don't post Meta questions; this could get you a hat.
@Makyen That works well for you because you have immediate reject privileges as a mod. That's a less compelling strategy for a regular reviewer, who would have to reject and then track the post until they could make the necessary edit. That's why "Reject and Edit" was put in place. The real bug is that "Reject and Edit" doesn't allow you to leave a custom rejection reason.
@PetterFriberg Yes, too many people are unfamiliar with the concept of "dislike". I don't know why, because those same people "dislike" plenty of things. I very much disagree it's harder now to post a first question than it once was. If anything, it's easier. The interface is better, the community is more established, there is actually on-site help, etc.
Part of the problem with social media is precisely that there is no "dislike" button. This vastly skews the perception of popularity, because the only people voting are people who like it.
@mickmackusa If that is indeed a duplicate, why does the solution provided by both of the answers to it (implode) not appear at all in any of the answers on the other page?
@Vickel This is not the consensus. Stack Overflow is a collaboratively edited site. A big feature here is that answers can be improved by other knowledgeable members of the community editing them. If we forbid all edits to code, then we shoot ourselves in the foot. So, no, you should not be rejecting edits to answers just because they change code. You should only be rejecting them when you're sure they are harmful and/or violate the author's intent.
(No author ever intends to provide broken/incorrect code.)
In general, and I see @Makyen as a key offender here, I think there is way too much hostility towards seemingly minor edits. The "too minor" reject reason was removed a long time ago. Search Meta and read all sorts of reasons why minor edits can still be useful, including several nice posts by Shog9. Note that the suggested edit interface already has a built-in feature to avoid edits that are clearly too minor: the edit must change more than 6 characters.
If it's been submitted, and it's not harmful, then it's probably a good edit and you should be approving it.
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Now, there is the little fact that sometimes well-meaning minor edits can be harmful because of bugs in (or at least poor design of) the system, for example, where a minor edit to a closed question robs it of a fair shake through the reopen queues. I feel bad about rejecting those, because it's not the editor's fault, but I think the position is defensible.
But when someone improves the formatting of the code, that's still a good edit, even if they didn't also correct misspellings. If you want to improve it, go ahead; you have that option. But the fact that the edit isn't perfect, doesn't fix 100% of things, is not a rejection reason. Your criteria is, does this leave the post better than it found it?
Edits you should be rejecting as "no improvement whatsoever" are those that... do not improve the post in any whatsoever. Like "bumping" edits that add invisible whitespace. Or edits that apply inline code formatting to random words. Or other formatting explosions (which happen way too often to suit me). Or edits that only change BrE spellings to AmE.