vote up 22 vote down star
1

I've seen (and written) plenty of posts which have been edited by others to correct typos, broken URLs and so on. I think everyone can agree this is a good thing.

How about editing for poor/broken English? I'm a bit of a stickler for correct grammar and spelling (my mother was an English teacher, poor me), but I can foresee this being a sensitive issue.

There is also the issue when changing the actual wording/spelling of things and inadvertently altering the meaning of the question...

Is this acceptable? Thoughts?

I'd particularly be interested in the views of any users who have learned English as their second/third language and do not know it terribly well. Would you be offended if I edited your post so it uses correct grammar and so on?

Update

The consensus seems to be that editing for grammar/spelling is fine and to proceed. Thanks to everyone for their input.

P.S. Also thanks Greg Hurlman for pointing out the shortcomings in my own question :-)

flag
You should have made it a community wiki so we could edit your grammar mistakes ;) – SoloBold Oct 27 '08 at 23:09

migrated from stackoverflow.com

17 Answers

vote up 41 vote down

As someone who learned English as a second language, I absolutely wouldn't mind spelling and grammar corrections, and I believe it to be perfectly acceptable.

Especially if it means others would have an easier time understanding my posts.

link|flag
1  
Totally agree. I'm here to get answers and ask questions, and if my english is bad or wrong here and there I would be glad if someone corrected it. – Stefan Nov 7 '08 at 3:33
I agree too. I think that when people are looking for help or asking a question, anything that helps get valid, useful answers/responses would be welcome. When I post questions in Japanese on the ruby site, I don't find it offensive at all to be corrected. – Jason Coco Nov 19 '08 at 23:58
+1 Me too. I've learned a lot from people correcting me. What I don't like is when they change the meaning of the question ( I accept it, sometimes is my fault, because the question was poorly written in first place ) So as long changing "nigth" by "night" and things like "write/written/wrote" etc it's just fine. If the question is does not make sense or is not even a question in first place, it should be remain unchanged and ask in a comment to clarify what the intention is ( and suffer from downvotes in the process ) But not make a wild guess and ask something else. – Oscar Reyes Aug 21 at 16:49
( oops I should have written "as long AS" above ... see what I mean ? ) – Oscar Reyes Aug 21 at 16:50
vote up 11 vote down

In general, most communities are adverse to correcting grammatical and spelling mistakes, not only because it would enrage the original author, but it would be a false portrayal of the author's personality. However, Stack Overflow is primarily a Q&A site; therefore I feel that it is perfectly acceptable to edit a post to correct spelling and grammatical mistakes.

Even so, there should be strict guidelines on what can/cannot be edited, for instance:

  • basic meaning of the post
  • style of the writing
  • misspellings in code

I think it's a good idea to send an automated email notification to the original author if somebody has edited his writing.

link|flag
This seems to suggest that there really shouldn't be usernames, rep,or anything else though ... – BobbyShaftoe Dec 13 '08 at 2:15
vote up 5 vote down

I speak English as a second language, spanish being my native one. I wouldn't really care if you corrected me; in fact, I'd love it.

The problem is: some people do not like that. I guess you have to live with it.

We might want to clone StackOverflow and call it: "Desbordamiento de Pila" (in Spanish). Spanish speaking users can go there.

P.D.: But given the current state of some young (and not so young) spanish speaking people, I think that editing for broken spanish written by spaniards (and other Spanish speaking people) will also be a must :)

link|flag
1  
I wouldn't go there :P ... Don't get me wrong, but is likely I don't get the right answer, or at least it will limit my options. Wound't it be great if everything were like StarWars, where everyone speaks its own language and everyone understands??... – Oscar Reyes Nov 20 '08 at 0:20
vote up 5 vote down

I think it's fine, but, by "English", do you mean American English or British English or both? Things like spelling differences, the different rules for using "an", and treating a company as singular or plural come to mind. We should probably just leave that area alone and never consider the other type broken, but I bring it up just in case.

Also, how do those with English as their second language answer questions that use contractions? In this case, doesn't a question deserve to be edited if it causes confusion on how to answer?

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

I find it perfectly acceptable to edit for clarity, regardless of whether English is the primary or secondary language of the original poster. Bad grammar and spelling errors detract from the value of the site because it becomes much harder to understand the question or answer.

I think you should leave a "Edited by name for reason" at the bottom of the post. If the poster doesn't like your changes, then the change can be rolled back.

Edit: I agree that leaving a public mark is needlessly embarrassing. If an edit is needed, then the edit reason can be left in the history as others have stated.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I would say that if you are sure you are preserving the meaning, it should be fine.

I think if I were putting a question up on a french language site I would prefer that someone unobtrusively makes a few small changes to fix the grammar, than people ignore it because the question doesn't immediately make sense (some people will not read a question that they could otherwise answer if it seems too much trouble to get to the meaning)

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

English is my second language. Even though I started learning English in grade school, I don't use it away from my computer or TV nowadays.

Even if in your first language, you can make mistakes. So no, I wouldn't feel offended at all if someone corrected my grammar on spelling mistakes. But that task should be taken seriuosly and responsibly, since I see how some extremely sensitive person could get offended.

Since it's for the common good of SO, and to keep a certain quality on the conten, I think it should be considered.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Just do it. If somebody is insecure about grammatical errors they can always edit it back (???).

However, I wouldn't make it a noticeable edit (noting it in the post). Don't embarrass the individuals whom tends to make errors all of the time.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

IMO, if a question's grammar is so bad that it needs editing to be understandable, then the only person qualified to do that is the original question-asker.

They're the only one who knows what they meant.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

English is my third language and I wouldn't mind if someone would correct my mistakes. It's still kind of embarrassing when it happens.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I think that it's totally acceptable to edit questions to help make them more understandable. English is my first language and sometimes I have trouble articulating my question, so I don't mind when people clean it up a little. I also participate in Japanese forums and I never have a problem with people correcting my grammar or suggesting more useful ways to phrase questions/posts. Especially if it helps me get useful, valid answers/responses!

I think it's a shame that anyone would get offended by this, as long as the edit itself isn't offensive. For instance, if someone added something like:

EDIT TO CORRECT CRAP ENGLISH

that would be bad and useless, IMO.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

English is my third language. So yes, I make quite a few mistake, and I absolutely dont mind people correcting them.

On the other side, I've had a few of my questions edited where the meaning was changed by the corrections. In this case I would have preferred them not edited. So for the correctors : yes, please correct all mistakes you find, but try not to second guess too much what the initial question was if you dont understand the question ...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Yes, please do.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Editing answers is fine, editing comments is unnaceptable. Some people say there is no distinction between the two. I disagree. For example, THIS is a comment.

There was a discussion about this but it got deleted.
http://beta.stackoverflow.com/questions/286/

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Yes, it helps improve the overall quality of the site. If I sound like a dummy, many TIA for helping me sound literate and competent.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I think you should leave a "Edited by name for reason" at the bottom of the post

The Stack Overflow revision history page shows edits and comments already. I'd probably just put something like "Corrected Grammar/Spelling".
It is however not directly visible - you have to click through from the question to see it. Whether or not it's worth putting a note in the actual text of the question itself is probably debatable. I don't think I'd bother.

@Kevin:
Other than your obvious personal disagreement, why exactly is it acceptable to edit answers but not comments?

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Other than your obvious personal disagreement, why exactly is it acceptable to edit answers but not comments?

Answers are objectionable pieces of information. Comments are just opinions that can be interpreted in different ways.

I think I would be embarrassed if I ever edited someone's post because of a typo.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.