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Today when I started reviewing the suggested edits. I came to a problem where I have 10 consecutive suggested edits from the same user and the edits doesn't improve the post much.

I approved it first time but then consecutively same suggested edits comes next.

Here are the links of the suggested edits.

My question is, what should I do in this kind of scenario where users picks the same question set and edits a question with the same "KEY Formatting" comment?

Is this kind of behavior is ok? It should be approved or rejected?

Well I approved it 1,2 times but most of them I rejected.

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    I've been rejecting them as well. Not only do they not improve the post very much they are all edits to very old questions (which will get bumped if the edit goes through). It might be worth flagging to a mod although I suppose the user will eventually get edit banned ... unfortunately many of them have already been approved ... Mar 19, 2015 at 7:12
  • There are almost 300 edits (key formatting) from this user for old questions, most of them have been approved :/ Mar 19, 2015 at 7:25
  • Yeah. Mostly his edits are approved and it is strange that he uses the same pattern for almost all the edits he had made so far. Mar 19, 2015 at 7:29
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    Thanks @rene for triggering me. You can remove the other comment now that I'm on this thread. Let me say I didn't know this was against the rules. (And actually I do not yet see it clearly is.) I agree, it is not a hell of an improvement, but still a small one. Formatting is one thing but this as well adds semantic markup. I recently came across several posts which lacked proper formatting and added the <kbd> tags for better readability. I figured it was an easy way to search for posts like this, so I did and worked towards my Copy Editor Gold badge with this...
    – udondan
    Mar 19, 2015 at 11:05
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    I did not see this as a problem as I'm not harming anyone or the posts and improve readability for users and maybe crawlers. Editing old posts is no crime as well, there even is a badge for it. The linked question regarding code formatting is not completely comparable. I am not misusing the formatting like described there. I'll keep from further doing this (not that I did this 24/7...) and see what the outcome of this here is.
    – udondan
    Mar 19, 2015 at 11:05
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    @udondan I'm trying to find a better meta-post but the help center says Tiny, trivial edits are discouraged.. In general we say Fix everything in one edit. If someone else has to edit the post after you, you basically missed a couple things to improve.
    – rene
    Mar 19, 2015 at 11:17
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    @udondan in the past there was a reject reason specifically for edits such as yours: "too minor". This was removed by SE during the latest revamp, for reasons which a huge number of users (at least of meta users) disagree with. Your edits need to be reviewed by at least three users, better make it actually worth their time and fix actual issues in posts worth editing. Also, an edit bumps a post to the front page where it takes away space from other questions. Refrain from making trivial edits, especially on questions nobody cares about; and don't go on a search spree for minor issues.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 19, 2015 at 11:28
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    I'm not too much in meta, so I don't know what went on there. But if a reason gets removed, doesn't that mean it officially is not a reason any more? Also, if this is community managed I suppose it means the majority decides and the majority seems to agree with those edits as they got approved, no?
    – udondan
    Mar 19, 2015 at 11:55
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    @udondan The change of edit reasons, just like the change of close reasons, was decided by SE and only communicated after the fact. Yes, it is not an official reject reason anymore, but the problems I mentioned don't go away by removing the reject reason. Of course they also apply to other edits like capitalizing "i" to "I", removing "thanks" etc that just fix a few very small issues. And editing is rate limited by time, you can only edit once every 30s or you'll get captchas. Also, if your motivation is rep/badges instead of improving the site, please refrain from editing anything.
    – l4mpi
    Mar 19, 2015 at 12:39
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    @udondan see also this related question and the answer by BoltClock, quoting: "I suggest you simply only edit posts that are in need of editing and put more time and effort into making your edits more substantial."
    – l4mpi
    Mar 19, 2015 at 12:40
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    The thing is, the docs simply are not clear. On one hand it tells to "avoid trivial edits" but just a few pixels away it tells to "correct minor mistakes", "fix grammatical or spelling errors" and "clarify meaning without changing it". What is trivial and what not is up to interpretation. And when the majority of people approves these changes, then the majority seems to think it is not trivial. After all it is adding to the readability of the posts. Unless it is written black on white this is opinion based.
    – udondan
    Mar 19, 2015 at 14:28
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    @udondan "On one hand it tells to "avoid trivial edits" but just a few pixels away it tells to "correct minor mistakes", "fix grammatical or spelling errors" and "clarify meaning without changing it"." I don't see how changing Enter key to <kbd>Enter</kbd> Key corrects minor mistakes, fixes grammatical/spelling errors, or clarifies anything. However, I think the only harm these edits are doing is the fact that your edits have to be approved by other people. If you were past the threshold where no one had to approve your edits, this question likely would not have happened.
    – Kevin B
    Mar 19, 2015 at 15:00
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    The way I look at it is this. What are the problem with small edits that only make trivial improvements to posts? The answers seem to be (1) they take time for people to review them, (2) they bump the question to the "front page", (3) they reward editors with reputation points they may not really have earned. Perhaps the answer is to give reviewers the option of allowing the edit but awarding no reputation points to the editor and not bumping the question on the "front page". That would drastically reduce the number of trivial edits while still allowing small improvements to be made.
    – Blackwood
    Mar 20, 2015 at 3:08
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    I'll reiterate what everyone except @udondan said, these edits do nothing to improve readability and are just for rep and badges. There might not be anything inherently wrong with that, but when you waste others time to review these edits, and wrongfully fill up the front page with old posts, it does far more harm than good...of which it does substantively none.
    – Kyle
    Mar 20, 2015 at 20:13

1 Answer 1

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I am among those who disagree with the policy change. People with edit privileges should limit their rate of trivial edits to a few per day. People without edit privileges should generally refrain from such altogether. Those people should also steer well clear of tag burnination and retagging projects, as they can only slow them down.

Yes, the game here is fun, but remember: the main game here is not editing or reviewing. The main game is asking good questions and writing thoughtful answers. If the promise of rep points helps you do that better, that's great. But if you're mostly in it to pick up little point-dribbles and badges for minor cleanup activity, you should probably find a more rewarding hobby.

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