It looks, from searching, that Meta is an okay place to ask this question; if not, I can delete it.
Here is the edit in question. 1 accept, 3 reject.
The OP (me) asked a question and tagged both Clojure and Java bytecode. A brand-new user who had run into a similar error when dealing with a matrix in Java (but clearly had no experience in Clojure) gave a very brief explanation of how he had worked around the issue. If he doesn't know Clojure, he won't be able to give a precise explanation of how to do it in Clojure, but his solution to avoid the error translates directly, and it works. Because it was this user's first post, two reviewers came in with generic complaints that he hadn't addressed the OP. I wrote the OP. The relevance of his answer seemed pretty clear to me -- though it was quite obviously short on details.
So I took his idea, and applied it clearly and directly to the OP code that produced the error, and edited this code into his answer. I applied his idea to get the code, and yet the rejections all say, "This edit deviates from the original intent of the post."
In my most humble opinion, that's hogwash. I think my edit only highlights the original intent of the post, an intent that the new user could have made more clearly if he had had any experience with Clojure. I don't think the author of that post should be penalized for having an answer but not knowing how to implement it in your language. It's not friendly to new people, and I don't think it's not taking the "review" duties very seriously.
Am I wrong?
I have read this answer, and unfortunately it only provides heuristics for editing code that already exists; I added a couple lines of code as an illustration of how the user's approach could be implemented in a language that user didn't know. One issue this answer does bring up is that I could have cleaned up his English just a little bit, but I didn't. If I gave a bad edit, perhaps the rejection messages should have been more clear? For instance, "This edit is incomplete." Because it doesn't seem like I "deviated from the intent of the post."