I encountered a weird situation today. I saw a question which was really badly structured, so I set out to edit it. I made some edits while, unknown to me, some other user was also editing that question.
Eventually, they posted their suggestions before I could post mine. So when I made my suggestion, it contained many mistakes which I had overlooked and that the other user had already rectified. They naturally felt outraged, blaming me for "sabotaging" their edit and lack of respect for their work as it seemed to them that I had intentionally removed their perfectly good edits. But, in reality, I didn't even know they had already made those edits.
So why is there no concurrency control? Stack Overflow can't bar users from editing simultaneously, obviously, but if someone else already made an edit that was also accepted, shouldn't it reflect on the text that I have in my textbox?
UPDATE 1:
(Posted this as answer but new knowledge has made me realize its not the answer)
Following up on this, Today I was editing a post. While I was at it, out of nowhere I received a notification:
"This post has already been edited. Your edit can only be saved if it is more thorough than the already revised version"
So I suppose Stackoverflow
has added that feature to their systems? You can view the revision history presented to me by SO by clicking the hyperlink in quotation.
UPDATE 2:
It happened again. I edited a question and without my knowledge it had been edited before and hence my edit was rejected (Rightfully so).
Note: The message statement was not exactly the same as I have provided here but that's the thing it said anyways.