I was reviewing suggested edits when I came across this edit. The original answer had a complete function, along with the code snippet (note that this is just a partial code, not the whole function):
FILE *secretFile = fopen(pathCString, "r");
RSA *rsa = NULL;
PEM_read_RSAPrivateKey(secretFile, &rsa, NULL, NULL);
The suggested edit by a new user added a fclose(secretFile);
, so that the function in the accepted answer does not leak a file descriptor. The change is not a trivial one, yes, so I actually did go through the trouble to verify that he is right, and went to accept the edit. But the edit had been rejected already with 3 votes stating that "This edit changes too much in the original post; the original meaning or intent of the post would be lost."
The user, having just 1 reputation on SO, then had no other choice to report his findings as to post in a new answer with just one line of code changed from the original. Someone else could have been discouraged by the rejection outright, and this could have been unnoticed already; certainly not a way to commend a new user for a contribution.
What is the rationale of rejecting this code edit? To me it was an exemplary one, and certainly not changing the intent of the post, unless the intent was to leak file descriptors. Furthermore it is not trivial knowledge that PEM_read_RSAPrivateKey
would not close the file.
Furthermore I hardly ever can even go through my 20 daily edit quota as the edit queue is almost always flushed, due to hordes of trigger-happy badge hunters. I have always skipped edits to code where I am not a domain expert, but this does not seem to be the case for the most reviewers. Even on Meta, many state that they outright reject any edits that touch any code, good or bad, if it is not for an obvious typo or formatting issue.
fclose
is or why it's necessary, and they might therefore vote to reject the edit. The review process tends to encourage this, because there are so many bad edits. All things considered, I think more reviewers clicking "Reject" is best. Unfortunately, that does mean sometimes good edits fall through the cracks. The only solution is to get enough rep to make those edits without requiring approval.