I am trying to make sense out of pending reviews of a suggested edit. I am trying to learn from this experience but need some help with understanding what I am missing. It might be a case of me not understanding a particular rule or guideline, whether not it is explicitly stated in the help sections.
I have no dispute with the reasons for edit rejection. I am puzzled, however, as to why these are their views. According to the reviewers, my suggested edit:
- "deviates from the original intent of the post"
- "makes no sense as an edit"
- "should have been written as a comment or an answer"
As the person who asked the question in the first place, the suggested edit certainly made sense to me. In paraphrase: (a) [original content] no there is no current solution to the problem, and (b) [my contribution] if you absolutely must have X, then this is your workaround. If I were looking for the answer to the question, I would be helped because I would know the answer and what I could do next. In the workplace, I have had it hammered into me: if no is the answer, then always present other options.
I also edited the "answer" because I wanted to also acknowledge the contribution of the person who helped me reach that answer. Wouldn't it be [insert bad word here] if I made my own answer and marked that as the right one?
Am I really missing something obvious about the rules and guidelines, or does this appear to merely be a difference of opinion? I am raising this question and details because I really am trying to improve my interaction with Stack Overflow but find some matters to be non-intuitive.