The description of the Create Wiki Posts privilege says:
There are also several ways a question or answer can automatically enter community wiki mode. In these cases, we believe that the post is de-facto wiki:
- the body of the post has been edited by at least 5 different users
- the post has been edited 10 times by the original owner
- you answer a question marked community wiki
- a question generates more than 30 answers
I notice that this very much leaves out the case where a post is transformed by fewer than 5 users, and I'm wondering whether it should.
For myself at least, it hasn't been all that uncommon to:
- Make an incremental change to a post
- Learn more information
- Update the post
- Come back to refer to the post and decide that it needs better formatting
- Update the post
- See that information has become outdated
- Update the post
- Etc.
(Here is an example. 12 versions by 3 users, some small changes, some large.)
When I'm doing this alongside other users, everything works as expected. When I'm the only one doing it (through particular interest, in the course of moderation, or pure chance) it seems strange to me that the behavior is different. I think posts where this happens should be made CW because:
- Posts that need this kind of maintenance and are wiki-style repositories are exactly the reason Community Wiki exists.
- I do this kind of updating as a member of the community, because I'm a member of the community. I don't think the edits would take on any special properties if they were done by >= 5 users.
- If I'm doing this it probably means that the post should have been CW in the first place. Perhaps I wouldn't be doing it all solo if, as CW, the post were more obviously encouraging of additions from everyone.
In an answer I will propose specific criteria for when a "< 5 editor post" should be made CW, and I'm also interested in others' suggestions for them.
Does this make sense? What do you think?
