When should code formatting be used for non-code text? enumerates where enclosing something in backticks is appropriate. For example, Fish Below the Ice says:
- Micro-snippets of code (This is especially important for HTML tags or things that resemble HTML tags, since some HTML is allowed in posts
and the site will try to render anything between
<
and >
)
init()
if (boolean) {
<form action="..." method="post">
<strong>
<level>
There is however such a thing as too much of a good thing and it can be abused. The backticks should be used to improve readability and placing them all over the place can actually harm readability. An edit which consists of nothing but these minor additions are "too minor", so I would agree that they offer "No Improvement Whatsoever". The comment "improved formatting" really indicates laziness on the suggested editor's part.
If we take a look at Why can people edit my posts? How does editing work? in the help center, it says:
When should I edit posts?
Any time you see a post that needs improvement and are inclined to
suggest an edit, you are welcome to do so. The original author of a
question or answer may always edit their own post, regardless of
reputation level.
Edits are expected to be substantial and to leave the post better than you found it. Common reasons for edits include:
- To fix grammar and spelling mistakes
- To clarify the meaning of the post (without changing that meaning)
- To include additional information only found in comments, so all of the information relevant to the post is contained in one place
- To correct minor mistakes or add updates as the post ages
- To add related resources or hyperlinks
I bolded the part which I felt was relevant. So yes, I believe you correctly rejected these edits.
To address the feature-request, this MSE post Ping an editor for repeated invalid editing behavior says that if the edits are accepted, you can ping their username, in the comments, informing them of why their edit was inappropriate. Of course, there's nothing stopping you from improving the post yourself afterwards. On, How to deal with bad edits, Shog9 says pretty much the same thing:
First, make double-sure that the edit is actually incorrect. If you're
not sure then move on - much time is wasted arguing over edits that really don't matter. Yes, there are a lot of edits that are just a waste of time, but if they do no harm then putting further work into
correcting them just adds to the damage.
Once you're sure,
Fix it. Roll back, re-edit, whatever. Always make sure you're significantly improving the post - I really cannot stress this
enough.
Leave a comment for the editor. Yes, you can ping editors by typing @<editorname> your edit was harmful due to <reason>
or some such in
a comment on the post that was edited. Not a lot of folks realize
this, and the end result is that folks get all frustrated by edits
instead of just educating the editors.
It seems our moderation tools are sufficient. However, if such a feature were to be implemented, i.e. by detecting the amount of characters changed, or heuristics to compare revisions, poor editors would only try to work around it. Perhaps a warning box that says something along the lines of:
It appears your edit consists mainly of minor code formatting changes.
Please try to make edits that address multiple issues within the post
and improve the post. Refer to our guide on how to edit
posts in the help center for
more information.
"formatting improvements"
are frivolous edits. For example, I practically always approve edits that simply re-indent the code.date
code format may be instrumental when the inline formatted word is both a keyword relevant to the question, and also a "real" word.highlighted like this
.