I like short, clear questions that in simple language explain the problem, and when relevant show some code to reproduce the issue. I tend to believe such questions improve the quality of the site as a whole, as both answerers and later visitors through web searches can quickly identify whether the question is understandable, and for the latter, applies to their problem.
With this mindset, I often edit questions to remove fluff and irrelevant code. I do this specifically after the initial vagueness of a question has been clarified through comments on both question and answers, and potentially when the problem is generally understood by one or more answerers, as indicated by OP through comments or even the "accept" checkmark.
I perform these edits in my quest for canonical questions. I want to do this to make the original goal of Stack Overflow, namely a library of great questions and answers, reachable - as opposed to an endless list of "too localized" problems that aren't helpful for anyone but OP, into which the site is turning more and more.
However, almost every time when I see the beauty in a question but OP fails to communicate that - and I try to reword OP's problem in clear, common, understandable terms that are not local to OP's specific code anymore, but still carry the original problem, OP disagrees and rolls back my edits - with terms like "That is not my problem" or "That does not look like my code".
Of course, in the former case you can say that I failed in my simplification (assuming OP did not fail to simply read).
In the case that my edit is a clarification, but OP rolls back, they're effectively bringing the site in a worse state. What are my options when that happens? Of course I'm not looking to start a rollback-war, but what if I (and maybe some users with me) think my edit is better than OP's?
Earlier questions on the subject:
How to handle user rollbacks due to stubbornness about formatting / content?:
- "[As an editor, don't rollback to your revision, OP] has more ownership of the post than you do" - err, no.
- "The point of Stack Exchange sites is to answer [OP's] questions." - nope.
What to do about stubborn Askers?
"don't edit the post any more." - and leave the site in a worse state.
What are we here for, to help OP or to make the web a better resource? Have we given up on improving the site, and are we silently slipping into "just answer every question"-mode, using the edit privilege for mere tag and minor typo fixes? That's fine with me and better for my reputation points anyway, but not what I thought the goal of the site was.