I know reviewing code edits can really be a grey area, so just chewing the fat here/and learning, and if I'm wrong no probs at all.
I just wondered what others think would have been the right course of action on this specific one.
(The edit has been approved, just some weird rejections in there)
The question:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26432438/php-foreach-loop-only-echo-if-more-than-one-item
The edit:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/6023143
Rejection reason:
Do not modify question code as it can change the nature of the question.
I did not change the nature of the question.
Surely in this case a quick looksie of the question, or even just the side-by-side comparison shows, I just removed the individual PHP open/close tags as we couldn't see the wood for the trees!
The code was 97% PHP, so individual open/close tags were redundant in terms of the question scope.
With it cleaned up, we could potentially help.
If it was "Why does this return an error" or "Why does this code not work", I'd not have edited the code. Would suggest in comment they tidy it up before we could help.
Other rejection reason
It would remove one of the fundamental items that the OP needs to be taught - proper syntax, non-trivial.
We're here to answer questions.
I don't agree that we're here to teach syntax, or anything unless it's within the specifics of the question being asked.
In fact, ironically, a teaching syntax question is likely to be off topic.
Besides, surely how they code their application is up to them!
If they want to tidy it up, they can ask a question "how would I tidy up this code" (on another forum or Stack site, of course..)
To reject my edit based on "make them do it so they learn" surely means we're to make every user edit their own question so they "learn"?
Maybe I've missed something...