It would be nice to allow users to mark a change in an answer (or question) as minor (e.g. for a simple spelling or grammar correction). A change marked as minor wouldn't push the question on top of the list of questions on the home page or in the feeds. It wouldn't trigger any notification. This could be implemented with a "Minor change" checkbox when editing an entry (a la Confluence). What do you think?
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Implementing any sort of "don't bump" functionality would also delay accountability and transparency for those edits. Notifying users of edits in the system allows them to take a look at the content and make sure there isn't something fishy going on. Imagine if people could make changes to the system without anybody noticing. That is very exploitable. |
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(I just was typing this for a question which then got closed as a duplicate before I finished. I'll post it here, thus.) There are several points to think about, here. The edit bumps questions to front page feature has these goals:
On the other hand, bumping many old questions to the front page has the effect that people don't see the new questions anymore. For example, in the last some days I edited all questions with "question" in the title on tex.stackexchange.com. After about 6 such edits I got a comment request to slow down ... since my edited questions came faster than new ones. I then changed to a "one per hour" rhythm (on average). (Some of these questions were further edited then by other users, and I think some even got new answers.) This is particularly bad for small sites - Stack Overflow has no such problem (for normal editing speeds), though it might affect people who follow the tags which I'm just editing. So, if you simply don't do this too often, the bumping is not a real problem. (Of course, if multiple people do the same, it again gets a problem ...) I'm not sure how to solve this - maybe have a kind of "approve" feature so another user will confirm that this edit both
Or, as Michael said, simply put a size limit. But some edits (like adding/removing a "not") can quite change the meaning of a post. |
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It would be good if this request were re-evaluated, in light of modern edit reviewing technology. Paŭlo Ebermann speaks correctly about this issue when it pertains to slower sites. A site that only gets 50 questions per day is still a good site. But if you make 20 edits, you're pushing good questions off the top. I see this happen on Gamedev.se all the time, when one of the mods goes on a re-tagging spree. It's important to do that kind of maintenance work. But it shouldn't clutter the front page. This isn't an enforced thing. We're not even asking for the option to be default. Just to have it be there for those who need to make a minor change to a post that doesn't warrant it bumping other content off the front page. We have tools to see people editing posts. We have tools to see people making edits to old posts. We have tools to prevent these people from making malicious edits. In short: Robert Cartaino♦'s argument about exploitation is simply no longer valid. |
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Instead of being denoted manually, some sort of heuristic could be used - e.g. if fewer than 1% of the post's characters have changed, it's a "minor edit". It might be tricky to get right though. |
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Recently Jeff repeated his opinion about not supporting a trivial edit checkbox:
(This matches Robert's answer, and I agree, even though nowadays there's peer review for those <2k.) |
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No, the bumping behavior is explicitly by design so you can get attention on older posts by making simple edits. Also, adding more complexity for a non-existent problem is something the SO development team is not going to do. |
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