More and more frequently in the review queues, I am spending time either fixing a post or considering whether an edit is valid, etc, only to make changes and have them denied/not count because someone else has blindly hit the approve button in the meantime.

My proposal is for the system to "lock" a post in the review queue once it has been presented to someone for review. Do not let anyone else (in the review queue) do anything with it until it is released by the last user it was presented to (or a certain amount of time has elapsed).

By "lock" I mean that it won't show up in anyone elses list until released. I did NOT mean that it would be in multiple queues and be unactionable in some of them. This would fit well as the queues only present one at a time anyway.

This will allow people trying to make good decisions the time to do it and prevent someone else from making that effort a waste of time.

As support, look to some of the published reasoning behind the auto-question ban. A large portion of it is that bad questions waste the time of the community. Taking the time to ensure you are making a good decision in the /review queue only to have it not count because someone was badge-whoring and clicking the approve button as fast as they could also wastes the users time... arguably the more (for lack of a better way to put it) valuable user who is willing to invest some time and thought into making the site better.

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I understand your grief, but the solution will cause annoyance to other editor (not reviewer) also. You probably can copy and paste your edit and go to the post directly to fix it. – nhahtdh Oct 9 '12 at 14:20
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Ah, my post wasn't clear, let me make a little change... I meant that it would not even be presented to anyone else until the last user it was presented to was done. – Barak Oct 9 '12 at 14:22
It may not be accessible from review queue, but it is still accessible from the post directly. There is also the problem of balancing the locking timeout, so that genuine editor will not be denied of their work (if edit for too long), and malicious one cannot lock the post from editing forever. – nhahtdh Oct 9 '12 at 14:25
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Ah, just saw you disambiguated editor from reviewer. I'm more concerned about the /review queue... stuff is getting approved that shouldn't be, and I would at least like my "no" vote to show if the item is presented to me in the queue. – Barak Oct 9 '12 at 14:26
I'm talking about editing in review queue, since it is the most annoying thing when you have done an extensive editing, then get the message that the suggested edit has been approved. – nhahtdh Oct 9 '12 at 14:28
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@nha, I didn't say it would be easy, and some experimentation would certainly be required to determine those things, but the system today is very discouraging for those who want to put some effort into it... this could be a step towards fixing that issue, and I think some effort should be made towards it. – Barak Oct 9 '12 at 14:29
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@nha... yeah, I get that and hate it as much as you do, it's what actually prompted me to post – Barak Oct 9 '12 at 14:31
While I wholeheartedly agree on fixing the issue, I just don't feel like your suggestion will work out. – nhahtdh Oct 9 '12 at 14:31
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Heh, I guess we agree to disagree then. I cannot see how it wouldn't be a vast improvement. There would be issues as you mention, but I think the magnitude would be far less than what we have today with the current system. How many questions have you seen here on Meta ranting about this very thing? We can sit here and shoot down ideas all day, but if we don't try something, nothing will ever change. "Paralysis by analysis" I believe would fit here. (Aside: wow, I didn't think MSO even had the "move the discussion to chat" warning after seeing some of the comment threads on other posts). – Barak Oct 9 '12 at 14:39
If this get support from other users, probably it will be implemented. Let's hope that I'm the only one so negative about this idea. (As a side note, I got the move discussion to chat with this message - the threshold seems to be higher on meta). – nhahtdh Oct 9 '12 at 14:41
Today, I was reviewing a question carefully, adding code format, looking for duplicates, but suddenly someone edited first. Then my edition was not approved, because there were left minor revisions. This is dangerous because either one might hush the review shrinking the quality of revision or just do not review anymore. Not sure about @Barak's suggestion, but definitely it is an important issue. – Andre Silva May 4 at 20:01

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