Often I'll take a code snippet from Stackoverflow and I try and execute it I find typos which prevent it from executing. After fixing the problems, I'd like to update the answer or question in stack, but sometimes I don't need to edit a few characters--sometimes even only a single character--but rules force me to make 10 character edits. What am I suppose to do? add a 10+ superfluous edit to the code? How is this a good idea? What is the basis for the policy that 'minor edits are a bad thing'? It's a basic fact that many little changes can result in a big overall effect. So I discourage this 'anti-minor edit' policy.
Example, original poster has the wrong variable, it should be 'dateFromFilter' not 'dateFilter'. This is the kind of thing that someone could easily miss and lose hours over. https://stackoverflow.com/posts/18129432/revisions
>Rare is the post that is made perfect with an edit < 10 characters
It's not rare at all that a few characters can radically improve a piece of code. i.e. == vs ===