Background:

When you suggest an edit, the outcome of whether it was approved or rejected is buried deep within your profile. You have to navigate to Profile » Activity » Suggestions to find a list of your recent edits, but even those do not say anything about the outcome:

waffles♦ introduced this to "facilitate learning", but what can I learn from this page? I have to manually click through the edits to see whether they were rejected or not. This is time-consuming or inefficient at best. There's also no learning involved at all, since there is no active feedback.

Feature request:

If an edit was rejected, there should be a notification message in the top notification banner, linking to the page of the suggested edit (which states the reject reason).

Your edit on "…" was rejected. Click here for more info.

enter image description here

This kind of feedback would improve the editing behavior, since otherwise, inappropriate suggestions might just continue.


Here's some more explanation:

Let's assume the case of a user suggesting lots of edits that are in some way harmful. Maybe they were too minor, like only changing keyboard shortcuts to use kbd markup instead of boldface.

Yes, we've already had this on Super User. Since it only takes one user to approve / reject there, some of these edits might even have been wrongfully accepted, others rejected. While this is a problem of its own, the user suggesting these edits will have a hard time even getting any kind of feedback.

They would never see the rejection messages because they're buried somewhere, unless they critically checked each suggestion in their profile. I doubt anybody would do this. Even more so, they might only look at their steadily climbing reputation, not really noticing a rejected edit.

Another case is users learning how to edit. How are we going to guide them if they're not told what they did wrong? They will just continue suggesting edits until somebody actually pings them in chat or comments somewhere.

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46% accept rate
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... especially given the time span between suggesting and having it accepted. On smaller sites than SO, this can be a while. Even on SU, I have seen suggested edits for 1+ hours in the queue. – Daniel Beck Jan 29 at 14:43
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I'm not sure how related this is, but I'd also be keen to get feedback on which of my suggested edit votes were overruled (I guess this is a unique problem for Stack Overflow as all(?) the other sites only require 1 vote, where as SO requires 2). Feedback on both sides lets a) the reviewers how to vote correctly, and b) the editors how to edit correctly. – Matt Jan 29 at 14:58
@DanielBeck Last time I checked there was one sitting for 13 hours waiting to be accepted or rejected. – slhck Jan 29 at 15:17
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If this gets implemented, the same needs to be done for declined flags. – BoltClock's a Unicorn Jan 29 at 18:59
@BoltClock'saUnicorn Now that you say it, that actually make sense and add to some consistency. – slhck Jan 29 at 19:05
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Do we already have some sort of protection against repeated identical suggested edits? That's the one thing I fear, users will try to do their same edits repeatedly until they get accepted, and then they're in. So if this were introduced, making everybody immediately aware of rejected edits (and possibly flags as suggested by @BoltClock'saUnicorn), we probably should get some sort of "suggested edit spam filter". – Daniel Beck Jan 29 at 21:09
@Daniel: Well, they're suggested edit still exists, just declined. Maybe they could set it up so that new suggested edit != old suggested edit. There's not really a great way of countering this because they could just change a couple spaces that were not changed before to fool it, and we don't want to use substantial difference criterion because it could potentially forbid them from submitting a further suggested edit. – animuson Feb 8 at 16:57
feedback

5 Answers

up vote 20 down vote
+250

I don't agree with a banner appearing every time one of your edits is rejected, but I could get behind one of the following alternatives.

  1. Update Profile » Activity » Suggestions to show which edits were accepted and which were rejected without forcing the user to manually click on each one. I prefer this solution because it is unobtrusive and makes the Suggestions tab more useful, in my opinion.

  2. Show a new message in the user's inbox for each rejected edit. I don't really like this solution because it is a bit intrusive, but it's definitely better than a banner.

In general, I agree with Jeff that positive feedback is better than negative feedback. That being said, any feedback at all is better than none.

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I like approach no. 1, maybe it could be combined with a positive/neutral indicator of recent changes, like "You have X new edit decisions" or something. I also added a screenshot to show what it could look like. – slhck Feb 25 at 17:12
@slhck Thanks for the mockup! That's pretty much exactly what I had in mind. – Chris Frederick Feb 26 at 7:54
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Approach #2 does seem a bit intrusive, but perhaps it could be improved by only delivering a message after N consecutive rejections, where N=5 or something like that. – Kevin Vermeer May 7 at 22:36
Strongly disagree that they need an inbox notification for every rejected edit. However, for edits rejected with a custom message this would be appropriate. – Shog9 May 15 at 14:53
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I understand the desire to educate, but there is something deeply wrong about the proposed design.

The net effect is the user seeing this broadcast in their face in the most obtrusive way we can:

You've done something wrong. Click here to learn why you suck.

You should only send the user obtrusive 'in-your-face' messages about how awesome they are.

Messages about non-awesomeness should always be delivered quietly, via a backchannel, in a way that minimizes their impact. Otherwise, we're slapping them in the face.

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Given that how few rejected edits there are, would this really be a problem? Isn't downvoting and closing the same? How else can users know they did something wrong? – slhck Feb 24 at 18:17
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@slhck While most edits are approved I think 29,000 rejected edits is still a lot – Some Helpful Commenter Feb 24 at 18:32
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Exactly. People who care have access to the information to learn from the outcome of their suggestions (though maybe that should be made more readily available), but shoving it in their face at every turn will just punish them for (usually) trying to help. Not to mention the fact that any proposal that causes that annoying bar to appear more often is inherently evil. – Tim Stone Feb 24 at 19:36
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Look, man, you're going to be gone in a week anyways. Now is the perfect time to pull this sort of stunt. Next week, waffles can just shrug and say "Look, that was all Jeff, and we don't know where he put the keys, so we can't undo it right now... we'll get back to you." – Popular Demand Feb 24 at 19:36
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@slhck I am not objecting to the desire to educate, merely the mechanism that was proposed. – Jeff Atwood Feb 24 at 20:00
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I can understand that notifications shouldn't be too much "in your face", but maybe edit decisions could be summarized, like the "You have X favorite changes" notification bar, and the tab in the profile could say "accepted" or "rejected" instead of "suggested", including the blue highlighted number in the tab name. – slhck Feb 24 at 21:06
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Okay, for a serious comment: I can get on board with the philosophy here, but the problem is that the current system doesn't match the "quietly, via a backchannel" setup. Edit suggestors aren't being notified at all of what happens to their work, and it's not even easy for the ones who have initiative to hunt that information down. – Popular Demand May 4 at 18:52
feedback

I asked a similar question - see Show rejection reasons for suggested edits in the global inbox - that has been closed as a duplicate of this one.

It was not en exact duplicate: what happened to me was that my edit was actually accepted, but there was one reject vote with a useful comment. I think that in such a case the chances of missing the comment are even higher that if the edit was actually rejected: I had no reason to go and dig up the comment.

My vote would be to have a notification in the inbox with the comment.

There are ways to criticize something without saying 'you suck' - altough probably as techies we are not very good at that.

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feedback

I think it's important to show this feedback not only to users who are suggesting edits, but also to reviewers who are approving and rejecting them.

At the same time, I agree with Jeff that the banner system is for "wow, you're awesome" messages only.

In regards to the feedback, if I were spending my valuable time suggesting edits, only to find out weeks or months later that they all were rejected because I was doing something wrong that I actually thought was helpful, I would surely want to know. While I agree with Jeff in that we don't want to flash banners, there should in fact be a very easy-to-get-to method of seeing the results of suggested edits and reviews, similar to how I can see why a flag may have been declined by a moderator.

Not making this information easily available shows disrespect to the people trying to help in assuming that we'll be offended by being shown or guided into doing it the right way.

Perhaps a modified version of Chris Frederick's suggestion where I click a "suggested edit results" section, similar to the "review" section. This wouldn't be mixed in with my normal question, answer, comment activity, but it would be available for me to review should I feel the need to.

As for reviewers, when I first started reviewing edits, I was approving tag edits, not realizing users without full edit privileges could simply click a "retag" link that disappears once you get full edit permissions at 2000 reputation. I later learned in a meta post that this was incorrect and that I should have rejected those edits. Meanwhile, I thought the people rejecting those edits were being ridiculous because I had no way to tell why they chose to reject.

Today, I see some rejections for edits that should not be rejected, perhaps due to the same ignorance now experienced by another new reviewer.

With the current system, it's not possible to help guide these users, both the ones making the edits and the ones approving and rejecting. I am for giving the feedback to those users who are interested and simply making it available for the ones who simply make suggestions without caring about the result.

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I think part of the problem is also that the criteria for what should and shouldn't be approved is very ambiguous. We have "too minor" as a reject option, but then we've also heard that "any improvement is a good improvement". Not sure how we rectify that, though, either. – Rob Hruska May 8 at 0:51
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I think if there isn't much to improve, then a minor edit is ok. I typically accept minor edits unless I see a whole bunch of other typos, mispellings, grammar issues and formatting issues. If I have to edit the post myself for more than just a few missed items, I don't mark the suggested edit as helpful. I'm not sure if that's the right approach, but it is one that makes sense to me. – jmort253 May 8 at 0:57
That's exactly my approach. At least there are two of us being consistent about it. :) – Rob Hruska May 8 at 1:36
feedback

Yes... no.

Admittedly, it is inefficient. However, in the end, edits aren't all that relevant. They don't benefit you a whole lot, they just benefit the community.

Here's the main problem however: if this was implemented, there would be hordes of people who would say things like what BoltClocks suggested. Although I'm not against the idea itself, it (at least seems like it) would lead to useless notification ideas like:

  • Let's notify people when someone replies the comment replying to their comment!
  • Let's notify people when someone posts another answer on a question they also answered!
  • Let's notify people so that they know stack overflow is broken!
  • etc, etc.

Although I myself would like this, it would contribute to the notification spam that I'm always getting. So please, please, Keep it simple, (not so) stupid.

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Of course you have a point. I've always liked the fact that you don't get notifications for everything, but an edit being rejected just vanishes somewhere in the profile. It's not like you could even easily research this yourself. Users that suggest invalid and harmful edits will never receive any feedback about how "bad" they acted. The other cases you mention are always "positive" notifications (except for a "broken SO account", I don't know what you mean by that). – slhck Feb 7 at 21:53
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But the hordes of people can be asked to make their suggestions in other meta questions. Then the bad suggestions (useless notification ideas) can be downvoted with an explanation like this and won't be implemented. – MarkJ Feb 8 at 12:49
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Uh, flags are a whole different matter altogether. Users need to know what we moderators tell them about their flags, I'd even say more so than what the community tells them about their edit suggestions. – BoltClock's a Unicorn Feb 8 at 13:52
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