Looking at Edit questions and answers privilege, I find this to be a surprising requirement:

Try to make the post substantively better when you edit, not just change a single character. Tiny, trivial edits are discouraged.

What motivated this, or rather, what does this mean exactly? Does that, for example, include removing stuff like "Hi, all", and "thanks in advance"?

[update] I was led to a blog post talking about this topic, but it has a million Comments, and doesn't really justify the rule (unless it's hidden in those million Comments). However, looking at Jeff's Comments gives me an idea that this was meant as a general guideline, instead of a hard-and-fast rule: If you are gonna edit a thing, rather check elsewhere on that thing if there are other improvements..

share|improve this question
Because they're trivial? – Al Everett Jan 8 '12 at 15:39
1  
@ÄlËverett: Just because it's a 2-character edit doesn't mean it's trivial. – endolith Nov 30 '12 at 4:41
1  
The problem with calling edits under 6 character "trivial" is that it completely ignores clearly useful but small edits. I gave an example here. This policy does more harm than good, and the rest of the question at that link demonstrates quite eloquently why. – Dan Dascalescu Feb 25 at 4:18

4 Answers

I think this is an excellent question and I'm unsure about the answer myself.

On the one hand, a website where all questions use "I" instead of "i" and all sentences end with proper punctuation looks and feels professional and serious, which is very good. People often match their behavior to the behaviors of those around them, so newcomers are more likely to use "you" instead of "u", or take a minute to proof-read their posts, when posting in such a site. This is especially true for question titles, which have a much higher visibility than just content.

On the other hand, there's no real upper bound to how many times you can improve a post. I've had posts of my own that I carefully proof-read and fixed all mistakes, only to encounter a few more grammatical mistakes later on. Is it worth the bump just to fix it? Would anyone care? Would anyone care if I wrote "starcraft" or "StarCraft"?

Personally, I try to edit formatting, spelling or grammar mistakes or omissions, but avoid editing for capitalization issues. I also try to avoid small corrections on posts that already give a high-quality impression. If someone posted a 4-paragraph + diagram answer, I'm not going to edit in a period after the last sentence of paragraph 3. It's just good enough, gives the proper feeling.

Also, Arjan raises an important point – I avoid editing within the author's grace period, especially if it's not a new user.

share|improve this answer
2  
Now that was a trivial edit I'd never make, @Kop, and surely not within the author's edit grace period. Care to explain why you felt the urge to make it? – Arjan Jan 9 '11 at 12:47
I find it fun to do X in a post that discusses about X =) – Andreas Bonini Jan 9 '11 at 12:48
It was funny :) but @Arjan raises an important issue so I've added it. – Oak Jan 9 '11 at 12:51
But let's not forget the typographically correct dashes! (In theory it should be —, not the one I replaced with, but that one is too long and looks very ugly) – Andreas Bonini Jan 9 '11 at 12:56
1  
@Kop, then what about the excessive whitespace around the em dash? ;-) (That's another reason I'd never make such edit—I'm just too scared to not get it 100.00% right!) – Arjan Jan 9 '11 at 13:07
2  
You make a good point about not editing within the 5 minute grace window. I should follow that rule too more diligently. – ChrisF Jan 9 '11 at 18:20
3  
"Is it worth the bump just to fix it?" Maybe the real problem is that minor edits still cause a bump. – endolith Feb 8 '11 at 16:44
Fine if you don’t want to make trivial edits, but that is no reason to stop everyone else. – Timwi May 8 '11 at 17:26

I think those wiki pages were written by us and vetted by the staff.

Since basically everyone here on meta is surprised by this I don't know how authoritative that sentence is; probably it simply reflects the opinion of the person who wrote it rather than the community's, and no one noticed it before.

share|improve this answer

I assume the motivation is twofold:

share|improve this answer
1  
1st one didn't really get support; 2nd one is a side-effect. – Tshepang Jan 9 '11 at 11:34
@Tshepang, I am only guessing above, but still: the support for that linked feature request is unrelated I think. (That feature request suggests trying to figure out what are minor edits, but my own downvote on that request does not mean that I appreciate minor edits being bumped onto the frontpage.) And as for the CW side effect, I think it's quite a huge side effect: for some reason many feel that reputation (and hence post ownership) is very important. – Arjan Jan 9 '11 at 11:54
8  
Hmm, one could address the spelling/grammar edit and the CW thing with a "minor edit" checkbox as on WP, and minor edits not counting towards the 5 edits for CW. – Jürgen A. Erhard Jan 9 '11 at 15:16
2  
@jae: and we could address spam issues by adding a "not spam" checkbox. I'm sure spammers would be honest enough not to ever check it. – Shog9 Jan 9 '11 at 17:56
2  
Both of these are effects that can be prevented separately; no need to prevent the edits. – Timwi May 8 '11 at 17:27
@Timwi, it could, but it is not? – Arjan May 8 '11 at 17:31

The privilege pages are editable (to those with enough rep) here on Meta and the changes pushed out to the other sites - see this question So to see who wrote what and what changes have been made you need to look here.

Looking at the revision history here on MSO you can see (assuming you can see this of course) that most of the post was written by Jeff.

So I think it's fairly authoritative.

Other answers detail why trivial edits are to be discouraged.

share|improve this answer

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged