While doing some work recently, I wound up writing a code-snippet similar to the one I found in a relevant answer. When I tried to run it, I discovered there was a missing import
(at least in Python 2.7.x *). When I made the suggestion that the extra import-statement be added, it resulted in this rejected edit, despite previous nearly-identical edits being approved on the same post.
This leads me to believe that either the rejection of my edit-suggestion was incorrect, or the previous edit-approval was incorrect. Which one is it?
* The question's tags do not specify a version.
EDIT: This got flagged as a duplicate of another meta-question that talks about code-edits. However, despite some similarities (such as a horizontal rule being common to both), there are key differences; I'm asking about making code runnable by fixing minor omissions, and not about adding brand-new blocks of code or performing major revisions to others' code style or content.
I understand that extensive revisions to an answer (especially if it's to the original code) are generally a no-no, and are better posted as separate answers so that various styles and approaches can be more-easily compared and contrasted by visitors. I also grok that there is a high bar for code edits.
Regardless of these points, I'd been lead to believe that proper import-statements are a good thing. Aren't they? Based off at least one answer by Deduplicator, I get the sense that code-edits are okay when they improve formatting, or make a question (or answer) more M, C, V, or E. Has this outlook changed recently?