I'm getting pretty close to the reputation where I can start to edit others' posts, and I'm wondering what the etiquette for when (and when not) to do so.

I figure that I should edit in the following circumstances:

  • Grammatical or spelling errors.
  • Clarification where the meaning is not changed. For instance if the title does not describe the question very well.
  • Where the user has made a very minor mistake that doesn't justify a full post to clarify.
  • To add related resources or links that will help someone answer the post, or provide context

Before the commenting feature was added, I noticed that some moderators edit posts in order to insert a reply or extension to the post. I feel this isn't good etiquette (but I could be wrong) because I don't know what to do with their changes when I come to re-edit or respond.

I also feel that I should be very careful not to change the meaning of any question or answer, even if that meaning is misguided.

What other rules would be best practice?

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Jeff posted some more guidance on the Stack Overflow blog: blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/03/the-great-edit-wars – Patrick McElhaney Mar 4 '09 at 13:29

migrated from stackoverflow.com Jul 31 '09 at 19:08

17 Answers

up vote 64 down vote accepted

I've noticed that some moderators edit posts in order to insert a reply or extension to the post. I feel this isn't good etiquette (but I could be wrong) because I don't know what to do with their changes when I come to re-edit or respond.

You've provided a great list that matches well with my expectations of our community. You edit to make things better, clearer, more effective -- never to change meaning.

Of course all this will be codified in the FAQ.. when I get to that..

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How ironic that the accepted answer to this question is one that was edited and then rolled back. – lkessler Dec 6 '08 at 20:33
Yes it is ironic. The editing rules should also apply to answers as well as questions. – Cameron MacFarland Dec 23 '08 at 23:00
Yeah, Patrick and I disagreed slightly, he's more editorial whereas I preferred to let the original stand. In this case he edited out references to a practice that was common during the closed beta, but much rarer (and less relevant) now. I felt that too many answers' context was lost by the change. – Keith Dec 24 '08 at 9:46

I think the types of edits that are acceptable can be summed up as copy editing.

The “Five Cs” summarize the copy editor's job: make the copy (i) clear, (ii) correct, (iii) concise, (iv) comprehensible, and (v) consistent; that is: make it say what it means, and mean what it says. Typically, via the publisher's house style, copy editing ensures the use of correct spelling, consistently used terminology, accurate punctuation, correct infelicities of style, i.e. grammatical and semantic errors, and formatting of text in accordance with the house style headers, footers, headlines, etc.

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Good point, but I'd be careful in this environment. It would be quite acceptable for a sub-editor on a coding magazine to change all { } blocks to be on new-lines if that were the house style, I don't think we should be doing that sort of thing. – Keith Aug 5 '09 at 9:08
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I was focused more on the 5 Cs. We don't have a house style. If anything try to honor the style of the original writer. That, and I'll delete "hi" / "thanks" because Jeff said to do so, /if/ I'm already editing for another, better reason. – Patrick McElhaney Aug 6 '09 at 18:14

Others having the ability to put words in my mouth, on posts tagged with my name, violates the principle that I'm happy to post with my real name/reputation, because everything I say, I said. How many people will really look at the edit list to be sure of who said what?

That's a good point. I think it would be nice if stackoverflow notified me every time someone other than me edits my posts.

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I'll second this thought, edits should really cause notification of the original poster. I recently had someone edit a post of mine that changed the meaning I was trying to convey, likely because they missed my point. – Peter Oehlert Dec 23 '08 at 20:59
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Of course, now you can find out about edits to your posts - or, at least, there is an edits notification tab in the page reached by the 'envelope' recent activity icon. – Jonathan Leffler Mar 25 '09 at 22:59
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Gimme an RSS feed for it. Gimme gimme gimme – MarkJ Sep 15 '09 at 17:25

Personally, I believe that the Wikipedia philosophy of "be bold in updating pages" is best practice.

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But wikipedia doesn't flag the edited text with the name of the person who wrote the original (and now gone) post. – Martin Beckett Sep 23 '08 at 16:20

The first thing I want to say is that I am no longer inline editing posts. I wanted a way to respond to people's questions directly, and there is currently no built-in way to do this (though Jeff mentioned that "annotations" are coming soon). In a way I was following Jeff's example. But I think now there is consensus that this isn't a good practice, so thanks, Keith, for setting me straight.

Now to jump in with my thoughts, edit to:

  • Fix grammar / fix spelling / improve formatting.
  • Make the post clearer or more effective.
  • Linking to other resources related to the post.
  • Add a warning if the post is dangerous (ie. recommends solution with a security vulnerability)
  • Add new relevant information missing from the post.

But do not:

  • Change the meaning of the post.
  • Add inline conversation.

I want to point out that Jeff has explicitly told us that Stackoverflow is going to be wiki-like, and is not a discussion forum. Those with edit ability who have something important to add shouldn't feel bad about doing so—it's the whole point of the site.

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Yep - I definitely think formatting changes should be allowed. Someone edited my Code Golf (12 days of christmas) post to put a CR before the code! I never knew that. – Lucas Jones Dec 31 '08 at 16:27
@Lucas Jones: Code Golf seems to have different editing rules than normal questions so that longer solutions can be replaced by shorter ones. Perhaps there should be a question about etiquette for modifying code golf posts, but I have a feeling it'll be closed into oblivion. – Joey Adams Aug 17 '10 at 5:48

@jko - I disagree with the "be bold" Wikipedia policy in the context of Stack Overflow as all of our messages have our name on them (up to a certain point). While it is unlikely that someone is going to waste a bunch of accumulated reputation to put something inappropriate in someones post, I feel that as long as the original posters name is on the question/answer that the edits should be nominal or for clarification. Once the persons name is dropped from the question/answer the "be bold" policy might be more appropriate.

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In truth, the ability of others to edit posts rather disturbs me. I can understand the idea, that SO is supposed to be a repository of factual information and as such editing to clarify is no big deal - facts are facts. However, there are many questions where there is more than a modicum of opinion solicited.

Others having the ability to put words in my mouth, on posts tagged with my name, violates the principle that I'm happy to post with my real name/reputation, because everything I say, I said. How many people will really look at the edit list to be sure of who said what?

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Keith, there is a reason you gained this reputation. We trust you, now trust yourself.
I think if you follow the list you have posted, you will do a wonderful job.

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Actually, I'm a little uncomfortable with editing for spelling too. Perhaps it's OK in some really obvious circumstances. However, the "right" spelling for a lot of words differs depending on what English-speaking country you happen to be from. The same goes for grammar as well.

For instance, it used to drive me nuts to see people talk about "Maths" before I realised that was a Britishism. They also love to stick u's after o's where I wouldn't expect them.

Anyway, I don't really like the idea of roving editors going around de-Britishizing the site, and other editors going around and Britishizing the site.

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Yeah - I really don't think it's worth changing the colonial "color" to the (correct ;-) "colour", or vice versa, a long as it's consistent. It's only really worth correcting spelling for clarity. – Keith Jan 2 '09 at 9:35
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... resist temptation to edit to "Britishising" ... – John Fouhy Feb 2 '09 at 3:48

I've noticed one user actually going and changing a whole bunch of tags from vs2008 to visualstudio2008. However, there are still several posts with the vs2008 tag and plenty more with vs200x and vs.net.

Is it that big of a deal? I'd be inclined to say that most people would look for the shorter version of the tag mainly because that is how it is abbreviated.

I guess, I'm saying, don't edit to make it aesthetically appealing to just you.

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Users edit tags like that to try and get the librarian badge. – Keith Jan 2 '09 at 9:48
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Users edit tags because we like consistency. Not everyone is a badge whore. – Stu Thompson Jul 31 '09 at 10:17

It should now be added on the inline comments:

Proper comments are now supported there's no need to edit posts inline in that way. Comments are relatively transitory – they are short and can be deleted. Anything too big for a comment should have its own answer – it still isn’t okay add inline responses.

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Once I can edit another's post, I don't have any reservations about extending their question into a very closely related field, even one that is more general and might be of greater use to others in the future, once answered.

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@Patrick - it's worth looking at copy editing rules (+1), but they do have a different purpose. Sub-editors change the meaning of prose all the time, but they typically have a single publication to make consistent.

I think I should be very careful with any corrections as moderator - I should mostly still vote down or post a clarifying answer. Otherwise I run the risk of correcting something that someone else has already voted down or posted a response to.

Style is another issue - I mean there's the style of writing (should this passage be in active voice? Should I edit out weasel-words?)

Then there's the style of coding - a religious debate I expect and not a moderator's job to get involved in (at least not as a moderator - that would be unfair).

For instance it would be quite acceptable for a sub-editor on a coding magazine to change all { } blocks to be on new-lines if that were the house style, I don't think we should be doing that sort of thing.

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@Jeff Atwood and @Keith

Should we use the same guidelines for answers?
Should we edit them when they are off-topic or factually incorrect?

E.g. When to "How can I do xxx in C#2.0?", an answer reads "Use LINQ", should we change it to "If it were C#3.0 you could use LINQ"?

Although it is a change in meaning, it respects the overall intentions of the author, and it makes the overall question better.

This typically happens when the original question gets clarified and a number of answers suddenly become off-topic.

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I really think not. If someone answers "Use LINQ" to a C#2 question they'll get voted down - if you then edit it they'll never understand why. Votes they get after you edit are to your credit, not theirs. – Keith Oct 9 '08 at 8:35

I'd like it if people didn't change the meaning or keywords used when someone makes poor Engrish.

http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/390394/list

The word "website" magically disappears. Now to be honest I have no idea exactly what the OP is asking but they might be asking about websites as much as they might be asking about Java desktop apps. However this edit makes my interpretation of the question silly and also gave me a lovely -1. Joy! :D

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I know personally if someone edits a question/answer of mine to insert a specific response I will just do a rollback. Common sense should rule the day.

@Juan:
You're worried about someone grinding for rep, then abusing the privelage? 2000 is a significant value, and if someone does try I think it can be dealt with on a case by case basis.

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Don't edit posts. Actually the ability to do so is a dealbreaker for me using the website.. If you want something anyone (with reputation) can edit, just add a wiki-like thing copy into and edit that.

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