I agree that the edit was inappropriate, for two very big reasons:
It did not appear to improve the answer appreciably. The first paragraph was reworded, but not in a way that clearly and significantly improves the clarity, nor adds significant new information.
It changes the answer. The original answer limits the changes of height and width to the one element in question. The edit modifies this to effect that change on all elements of that class (profile_pic
).
Either of these reasons would be cause for a rollback, but the latter is particularly egregious. There is nothing in the question that would lead a reader to believe that the height and width changes must be applied to the entire class. Maybe it should be, but doing so is not a given nor does failing to do so detract from the original answer.
Someone who feels that the actual code in an answer should be different, where the original answer's code is not clearly wrong per se (e.g. has a serious bug that is inconsistent with the answer author's intent), should be adding a new answer themselves, providing detailed explanation for why the differences in their answer are important.
This does two important things: it preserves the original, correct answer for future readers, and it enhances knowledge (potentially) by providing a clear contrast of differing opinions and justification for that difference.
Rolling back to the previous edit was entirely appropriate here. That said, I would refrain from rolling back edits, even on your own posts, unless you can articulate in a clear, specific way why the edit was inappropriate (failing to improve the answer is a perfectly legitimate basis for a rollback, so the bar is not very high here). The default attitude should IMHO be to accept edits; give the editor the benefit of the doubt, until you can (at least to yourself) clearly state why the edit should not be accepted.
Finally note that rolling back edits may get you into a tug-of-war; I would roll-back only once. If the author of the edit persists, that's the time to bring a moderator into the mix. Remember to stay professional and polite to everyone involved, including the edit's author (as you have here).