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I used to get notified when my answer got edited. I didn't get notified of this today[1].

I've noticed this before on answers that had received a comment at the same time, so I thought the comment notification also served as the edit notification, but this time, I didn't get any notification at all.

Was this change intentional? I consider this a bug. Over the years, I've had numerous edits which introduced errors into my answer[2]. I'm a expert, and I would like to review any edits made to my answers.

I also commonly fix details in other answers, and I'm dismayed to learn that the people whose answers I have edited haven't been receiving notifications of this. I was relying on it.


  1. Ironically, this very post received an edit that didn't trigger a notification.
  2. That's not the case in the edit I mentioned above; it was perfectly valid typo fix.
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  • (This is probably not the first time it's been asked, but I couldn't find a duplicate.)
    – ikegami
    Nov 29, 2014 at 19:15
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    Which edit were you expecting a notification for? I do know "trivial edits" and I think tag-only edits do not trigger notifications.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Nov 29, 2014 at 19:17
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    The word "today" links to such an edit. It was a trivial edit. I'm not sure how SO judges what is trivial or not, though. Changing and to or can make a significant change.
    – ikegami
    Nov 29, 2014 at 19:19
  • Perhaps that would be worth a new question if you actually get a non-trivial edit that SO has judged as trivial. I understand where you're coming from, and am a bit shocked myself, but without concrete examples of problems caused by the system behaving as intended, experience has shown me there's no point in arguing that the system design has flaws.
    – user743382
    Nov 30, 2014 at 11:07
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    @hwd, How about this? I just negated a statement in someone's answer, and I doubt they got notified. Do you really think people's answers are getting edited so often that some of the notifications needs to be blocked?
    – ikegami
    Nov 30, 2014 at 18:27
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    Please change status to "status-brokenbydesign". This is bad. Dec 1, 2014 at 22:30
  • @ikegami Like I said, I'm a bit shocked myself. I'm agreeing with you. The thing is, though, that if there is no concrete example of a problem, others (not me) will claim that they see no evidence of a problem, and therefore there is no problem, and nothing will change. As indicated by the status-bydesign tag this question has received.
    – user743382
    Dec 2, 2014 at 13:09
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    @hvd, Your logic is completely backwards. You shouldn't be asking if suppressing the notifications causes problems because it obviously does. (Below, 52 people indicated it's a problem for them.) You should be asking yourself: 1) What problem does suppressing the notifications solve, and 2) how does the severity of that problem compare to the severity of suppressing notifications. No matter how I do the math, I just can't imagine the number of notifications being suppressed it large enough to annoy anyone if they weren't suppressed.
    – ikegami
    Dec 2, 2014 at 13:46
  • @ikegami Again, I'm agreeing with you that there is a problem. However, neither your opinion nor mine matters. I'm trying to explain why nothing here will change the opinion of more important people: it seems clear to me that they do not currently see suppressed notifications as a problem, and it seems likely to me that nothing that's currently posted here is going to change their minds.
    – user743382
    Dec 2, 2014 at 13:55
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    @hvd, The fact that we perceive a problem is a problem. The problem is that this features makes us feel some mix of uncomfortable / violated / distrustful / paranoid / rude / deceived / deceiving / ???.
    – ikegami
    Dec 2, 2014 at 14:19

2 Answers 2

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This appears to be broken by design -- the design suppresses notifications whenever the software decides a change was "too minor to bother the user with".

As stack overflow is not currently running an AI capable of understanding the import of swapping Trust for Truth in an answer, it appears that it considers small text edits to be mostly too minor (there may be other, unknown heuristics).

As a workaround if this is not fixed (or until it is fixed), stackoverflow.com/users/USER_ID/?tab=responses&sort=revisions with USER_ID being your user ID will give you a dump of all revisions done to your content on a particular website.

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  • 6
    +1 for the revisions link - I had no idea how many of my posts had been revised until I saw this. Thankfully most of them were good edits that improved my contributions, but I was surprised. Dec 2, 2014 at 16:59
  • I'm toying with the idea of making a minor vandalizing edit to this node... :)
    – ikegami
    Dec 2, 2014 at 17:40
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Notifications are being sent out, but they are intentionally suppressed for trivial edits.

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  • 1
    You can check your response tab > revisions from time to time for any revision made on your post by other people.
    – nhahtdh
    Dec 1, 2014 at 4:32
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    100% agree with @canon: anyone editing my answer (or question) is an event I want to know about. I don't care if it is trivial; I want to know. I may not do more than look at what was done, but I want to know that it was altered so I can validate what they did to my work. Dec 1, 2014 at 15:19
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    One of my pet hates is over-use of in-line code back-ticks.Someone edited one of my answers to put "underflow" and "infinity" in back-ticks, even though I was using them as English words, not code quotes. The change only involved a few characters, but did not seem trivial to me. Dec 1, 2014 at 16:23
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    @canon, I remember seeing an interface that could mine SO's data. Could it be used to find out the number of trivial edits to which the average user has been subjected? If the the purpose of restricting the notifications is to reduce notication spam, let's put some numbers on the volume.
    – ikegami
    Dec 1, 2014 at 16:32
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    It's not clear what qualifies as trivial. Is adding four characters "trivial"? What if the four characters are N O T and a space"? Dec 1, 2014 at 22:21
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    @EuroMicelli According to Kevin Montrose, "a non-trivial edit is one which changes at least 10 characters (this is using a diff algorithm, so it's not a simple add/delete; and is naturally a little fuzzy). For the 'technical' sites (where code highlighting is enabled) changes to code of at least 2 characters are considered non-trivial." This was in June, 2012, so it could well have changed, but that's the most concrete statement I could find from the powers that be. Dec 2, 2014 at 17:00
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    So changing "true" to "false" or inserting "not " is a trivial change. So is scattering random back-ticks, as long as one inserts no more than five pairs. I think the whole "trivial edit" system needs a design and usability review. Dec 2, 2014 at 20:18

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