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Edit

Apparently these edits are too small. Then I have more questions:

  • Why does the system allow this?
  • Why was this changed and why are there points given out for these edits, if they are in fact too small?

Language tags and framework/library tags are not equal. Adding or removing these tags can change the post audience and even the way it's formatted. Why is this fact completely disregarded in the above "too small" rule?

Not to mention, apparently "code formatting" is a small change. Without proper code formatting, a post is basically useless and unreadable and sometimes may even contain hidden code.


I'm quite active on SO and I make a good bit of edits, though I still don't have over 2k repuation. I've noticed that the ONLY time I have edits rejected are when I get 3 users who have sometimes upwards of 3x the number of rejects as accepts.

I know when I look at the review tab, there are QA checks. Do these QA checks exist for edits as well?

user1 has approved 382 edit suggestions and rejected 362 edit suggestions
user2 has approved 276 edit suggestions and rejected 425 edit suggestions
user3 has approved 80 edit suggestions and rejected 34 edit suggestions
user4 has approved 660 edit suggestions and rejected 371 edit suggestions

No surprise that this edit was rejected by user1, user2, and user4 for This edit is too minor; suggested edits should be substantive improvements addressing multiple issues in the post.

The edit in question was adding a java tag to a question that was only tagged with spring maven and spring-boot. Adding the java tag is completely relevant to the question and will make the question available to thousands more followers. When I look at the user's histories, none of them have any experience with Java at all.

My submitted my edit a second time with a more passive aggressive comment that further explained it Java is the primary tag for this question. This is a Java question. I added that tag. and it was approved. The previous comment simply said "added java tag" because I felt that it was self explanatory.

user5 has approved 165 edit suggestions and rejected 3 edit suggestions
user6 has approved 386 edit suggestions and rejected 185 edit suggestions
user7 has approved 142 edit suggestions and rejected 11 edit suggestions
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  • 6
    Unless the missing Java tag was the only thing wrong with the post, rejecting an edit that adds a single missing edit as "too minor" can be considered OK, and even then a tag-only change might still be "too minor".
    – awksp
    Jul 14, 2014 at 17:48
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    I assume you're talking about this suggestion?
    – awksp
    Jul 14, 2014 at 17:50
  • @user3580294 Even if it opens it up to a exponentially larger audience? If this is the case, then why did they allow this feature? I believe I remember at one point that adding a single tag was not accepted by the system, therefore could not be rejected by the community. Edit: yes that one. I wasn't sure if it was acceptable to link it directly.
    – mawburn
    Jul 14, 2014 at 17:51
  • I'm not in the position to give an authoritative answer to that, unfortunately. Looking at the question, I don't think there are too many other things that need to be fixed, so I'm not too sure what the correct thing to do in this case would be. Edit: It probably is OK to link a review directly, especially since the context of the post's contents would be pretty important.
    – awksp
    Jul 14, 2014 at 17:58
  • 4
    Also, I think you should focus less on the users reviewing your edits and more on the types of edits you are making. Some people here would think that those reviewers rejecting more edits than they are approving are doing much better than the reviewers with their stats the other way around, due to the perceived falling quality of edits and reviewers here. Also, it's not too clear what you want us to do about those "high-reject-rate" users. Is that something you want to prevent?
    – awksp
    Jul 14, 2014 at 17:59
  • @user3580294 I have 158:15 I admit that a few have been rejected fairly, maybe half, but the ones that have not been fall into this question. There has been at least 2 other times where I did not explain what I did in my comment and they only saw the minor edits to fill up the char limit (such as capitlization) where as the rest was putting code into code blocks which can be pretty major, especially when important lines were completely hidden.
    – mawburn
    Jul 14, 2014 at 18:03
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    A rather large percentage of your edits, looking through your recent history, are improper edits that should have been rejected. Sadly, there is a gigantic proportion of reviewers that are pretty terrible at reviewing and approve most everything, so your bad edits have been approved.
    – Servy
    Jul 14, 2014 at 18:18
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    @mawburn And the majority of those edits are too minor. You should be making more substantial edits when you edit a post. If you know that what you're doing is wrong then why are you continuing to do it?
    – Servy
    Jul 14, 2014 at 18:21
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    @Servy Helping out the posts making relevant changes to get the users the answers they deserve. Whether they are considered minor changes or not. Isn't that the point of it all? Tag changes make a big impact. Points or no points, I would still make the changes.
    – mawburn
    Jul 14, 2014 at 18:22
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    @mawburn You'll find that there is no real consensus among users concerning the "too minor" reject reason. Or many other community moderation actions. Such is the nature of the beast.
    – Air
    Jul 14, 2014 at 18:23
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    I haven't taken a close look at your edit history so I can't tell you whether those edits in general were minor, but the gist of what I've read on Meta is that if you're still in the have-to-have-your-edits-reviewed phase, the edits are expected to be pretty substantial, fixing multiple things in a post. I'll admit, I didn't follow that when I started out, but I do try to let people know when I can at this point. Code formatting can be minor, depending on exactly what you're doing, but if you're digging hidden things out, then it's probably OK. (continued)
    – awksp
    Jul 14, 2014 at 18:24
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    Well, not strictly. There are other users who have been around much longer than I have that can elaborate on this more, but at least from what I've heard at times SO should be thought of more as a "repository for programming knowledge", which means that not everyone could (or should) have their questions answered. And unfortunately, I can't tell you why the system changed, because as before, I haven't been around nearly long enough to have experienced the change. Do you know if the limitation applied to those users over 2k rep too? If so, perhaps that was the reason for the change.
    – awksp
    Jul 14, 2014 at 20:06
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    @mawburn Tag only edits have never been disallowed by the system. Once upon a time you only needed 500 rep to make tag only edits without review, not 2k. This additional privilege, was revoked due to the volume of inappropriate tag edits by 500-2k rep users. Now those tag only edits get reviewed, an since the review system rubber stamps most suggested edits regardless of their appropriateness, inappropriate tag edits still get made and applied by 500-2k rep users.
    – Servy
    Jul 14, 2014 at 20:16
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    Vandalizing your own question by removing all of the question's content through edits is not appropriate.
    – Servy
    Jul 15, 2014 at 14:23
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    @mawburn Yes, it is vandalism to edit a question to remove all of it's content. You're certainly welcome to flag it for removal, and in all likelihood that flag will be declined. The votes indication that the readers primarily don't agree with the position you're taking in your question. That doesn't mean that the question should be removed. Keeping it around, so that other can see that the community disagrees with this sentiment, adds value.
    – Servy
    Jul 15, 2014 at 14:27

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I think looking at the reject rates for your reviewers is a red herring. Your sample size is tiny, and it would be hard to avoid confirmation bias when you're picking observations based on events you've noticed/remembered.

The specific example you give doesn't even look that bad, to me; the first and fourth users you show have more accepts than rejects, so why is it "no surprise" that they rejected your edit? Based purely on the numbers, the expectation is that they would approve.

I think the important message for you to take away from this experience is that the suggested edit summary is not just an afterthought. You tried again, being more explicit about your rationale for tagging, and your edit was approved. Users pay attention to what you put in this box, and if your edit is very brief, it's all the more important for you to be explicit.

You saw this as being "passive aggressive" but I would counter that your second comment was simply sufficiently explicit to convince the reviewers that the edit was needed, while your first was not. Sounds like a winning strategy to me.

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