Having recently reviewed a few suggested edits, I've found that not being able to see the comments on the post is hindering my understanding of the context of some edits.

In particular, there have been a few posts where someone has made a substantial edit to a question or answer which significantly alters its meaning. Typically I'd reject that as "too major", since it can't be known that the new meaning of the post was what the original author intended.

However, in some cases it is clear from the comments that the original author is aware of the intended change, and as such is not in fact mis-representing the author's intentions. In these cases, it would have been useful to see the comments when making the review decision.

As an example, a common cause of this is when an inexperienced user is asked to clarify their question, and ends up writing a comment that would be better of as an edit to the question (due to length, excess code content, etc), presumably due to lack of awareness that the question can be edited. Often, other users will helpfully edit the question to include the information the OP put in the comment (see here, here and here for examples). In this situation, it is clear that the edit reflects the OP's intentions, but the context indicating this is only present in the comments.

In short: is there any particular reason comments are not displayed in the suggested edit review tool? I think it would add useful contextual information when making review decisions, and presumably trivial to implement.

Note: this is not a dupe of this post, as it does not concern comments posted after the suggested edit.

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@Bart: I don't disagree - in an ideal world, the original author would make the edit. It's not an ideal world though, and the situation I describe does happen. Even if we discount this particular circumstance, I still see no reason why comments can't be included in the review tool, and think they would be of benefit if they are included. It's about making the most informed decision possible, which can't be the case when comments are absent. – Mac Oct 11 '12 at 23:27
@Bart: I've added an example explaining a common cause of the issue. – Mac Oct 12 '12 at 0:10
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Yep, other review queues already show comments so it will be consistent with existing behavior. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Feb 25 at 8:24
@ShaWizDowArd: thanks, if that by itself is not a good enough reason then I don't know what is. Thanks for the bounty too: I was hoping my edit yesterday would get some attention (it has), but a bounty certainly will help! – Mac Feb 25 at 19:42
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Cheers Mac, my pleasure and here on Meta I'm using my rep to try attract attention to what I think deserves it. :) – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Feb 25 at 20:58
This would definitely help sometimes, when users edit from the comments. – hjpotter92 Feb 26 at 23:46

1 Answer

My approach to this is to reject edits that add material or change code UNLESS the edit revision comment says something like "incorporated background from comment by question-asker" or "adding code from answer by question-asker" or otherwise makes it clear to me that there is more going on here than meets the eye. Then I will right-click-opn-in-new-tab to take a look at the question in context, with comments, other answers etc.

If you react to all additions of material with a trip to the original question you're a better person than me. And maybe you're encouraging edit-suggesters not to explain themselves properly? The revision comment is there for a reason...

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I do exactly the same. I really feel I shouldn't need to open another tab just to see the comments though. And, clearly, not everyone does this - the second edit I linked to in my question was rejected as "too radical", presumably because the reviewers didn't bother to do this. I suspect it's just too much bother for most, and having comments available would help address that. – Mac Feb 27 at 0:48
I would approve that because the comment is Added manifest from comments for OP - don't know why the others rejected it – Kate Gregory Feb 27 at 1:03
I see three reasons why the other reviewers might have rejected the edit: (a) they didn't bother to read the edit comment, and decided it was too radical based only on seeing a mass of added code, (b) they saw the edit comment, but decided the edit was too radical regardless, or (c) saw the edit comment, but couldn't be bothered opening another tab to check the comments to verify. The point of this question is to address scenario (c), and reduce the likelihood of scenario (a). (Scenario (b) is more a difference in review philosophy, which is a whole different discussion.) – Mac Feb 27 at 2:30

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