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Jongware and I both made an edit to remove an answer which had been included within a question.

He apparently had started editing about 15 seconds before me, but I had saved my edit before the notification appeared that an edit had been made to the post.

When I saw the notification and looked at the revision history, it shows my edit with no changes (since we both had removed the same text).

Is this some type of reader-writer problem where his edit didn't exist before mine was committed?

Either way, I imagine this happens so infrequently, it wouldn't be worth fixing unless it happens to affect any integrity of the database.

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    I also noticed that and wondered what exactly happened. Oh don't those pesky 1 in a million chances turn up 9 times out of 10!
    – Jongware
    Jan 30, 2016 at 20:25
  • Sorry, I used your question for an experiment... I just removed a newline, but it still shows edited text in the history. I thought it may be what happened in your case but clearly it's not that. Jan 30, 2016 at 23:54
  • @Jongware Yep! And SO always refuses to do anything about it :-)
    – TylerH
    Feb 2, 2016 at 4:16

1 Answer 1

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From this answer to "Simultaneous editing (exact same timestamp) - no warning when overwriting other edit" by zxq9:

My understanding is that both commits should be accepted, the latest one takes precedence, overriding the other. Both are in the revision history. In what is essentially a wiki system this is much better than mysteriously rejecting the arbitrarily invalidated commit. They are both valid and neither should be discarded.

I think since you were both basing your edits on revision 2 of the question, the system just overwrote the edit that Jongware made with yours. Since it was the same edit, no changes were present, but your revision was recorded nonetheless.


This is definitely not treated as though you were editing Jongware's revision (revision 3) because, as you pointed out, there were no changes: even whitespace changes are eligible for side-by-side comparisons, as Lucas Trzesniewski's revision (#3) to your question shows. You can easily test this by trying to submit an edit with no changes (click "edit", then "Save edits") - since there are no changes, no revision is recorded.


This is also not treated as though changes were made and undone - see revision 6 of this answer, which clearly says:

[Edit removed during grace period]


I'll see if I can get two people on the SOCVR chat room to coordinate edits to test this theory.


Update: I asked on chat and got a couple of replies which confirm this:

Wai Ha Lee: Can I recruit two volunteers for a 2 minute experiment for a meta answer?

Tunaki: @WaiHaLee No need. I confirm. It works like this. It seems to be recent change.

...

Sam: @WaiHaLee Yeah, I've seen this happen a lot.

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