I no longer fully agree with the answer given below, but I have left it intact for community assessment. I endorse Shoq9's answer and point out that the ability to inject authorial intent is compatible with the inviolability of OP edits; the OP can override any edits. The risk of chameleon-question answer invalidation is outweighed by the possibility of improved site quality.
Please vote on this answer based on the content below, not the contradictory text above, but feel free to discuss either perspective in a comment.
The problem here is not a change from one intention to another, but a change from an unclear intention to a specific intention.
What is the result when running the following piece of code...
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
while ( true )
fork();
}
The question of "what is the result?" can be interpreted in at least three different ways:
What happens in the other forks generated by this code? (Do they continue looping also? Does this cause exponential or merely linear process growth?)
What happens to the operating system's and physical system's resources when subjected to this fork bomb? Does (or how does) this cause a system failure?
Can a specification-compliant compiler eliminate the while
loop as an optimization?
These different questions require vastly different answers, and I assert that it's totally unclear in this case which of them is being asked. (If you disagree with me on this assertion, then you believe this question is in a fundamentally different category of clarity than I do, and you will not find my arguments convincing.)
When a question is unclear as this one, it seems detrimental to force it into one of these specific questions without clarification from the OP. Some reasons include:
If the editor guesses wrong, and the OP returns to assert their original intent, it could invalidate existing answers. The editor would have made a chameleon question, rather than simply an unclear question later clarified by the OP.
The specificity introduced by the edit may make the question too sophisticated for the OP to understand, leaving them unable to provide clarification (it's not actually their question, so how could they clarify the intent of the new question?) and unable to make an informed decision about which answer to accept, since the question now describes a problem they don't have (or describes it in a way that they cannot understand).
This question should be closed as-is, and the OP should be encouraged to introduce specificity so that it more clearly outlines the problem to be solved. (For example, outline the three possibilities above would have been helpful to the OP here, to highlight just how unclear their question currently is and provide avenues for fixing it.) If the OP provides that clarification, then another user could implement that clarification as an edit.
I'd propose that a question needs to have sufficiently specific authorial intent (either in the question or comments) in order to be developmentally edited, so that editors do not transform the question into something that is incompatible with what the OP is trying to ask. If it's not clear what the OP is trying to ask, a developmental edit will bind the unclear question into one of many valid, incompatible possibilities. A community-supplied authorial intent seems bad, since it could clash with a later-emerging authorial intent from the OP. (I wish to avoid the situation where some third party is telling the OP what their own question is about: "Sorry, I already decided your question was about C++ compiler behavior, not about the behavior of the fork
method. Go ask another question; this one is mine now.")