Hot answers tagged rejection-reasons
20
Your edits are problematic. Let's take a closer look at them:
http://stackoverflow.com/review-beta/suggested-edits/765765
You are completely changing the answer. I get that your intention is to update it, but why completely remove the old answer? Better yet, why not just post an answer of your own?
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16
This has now been implemented in the same way as for close votes:
You can see the rejection reason if you click on the "permalink to this edit suggestion" link.
The rejection reason is displayed in the "Reviewer stats" section under the suggested edit.
But I agree that having it work like the close vote dialog would be a bit more practical.
16
Yes, it was the right thing. Edits should not be used to reply or comment on the post. If someone wants to suggest an improvement for your code, they should comment. Your code is intrinsic to your post. If it is modified, the question changes. Stack Overflow's policy on edits that change the post is clear. I believe you reserve the right to do as you did.
14
The owner of the post rejected it with:
I have given with basic codiing end to end of the program so that they can understand easily
The original author of a post can veto any suggested edit made. I guess he disagreed with your change, feeling that the 'unessecary' (sic) code you removed was there for a purpose.
The other reviewer rejected your edit ...
14
There is no point. Ultimately, if a user wants to waste their item editing a post which is going to get deleted anyways, I don't see any particular reason to approve or reject them. Sure, they get a +2 reputation for editing the post, which is going to get retracted when the post is deleted. Oh well.
The way I see it:
If the post is on the verge of ...
13
The threshold between editing someone's answer to improve it and posting your own answer is somewhat subjective, so it isn't surprising that different reviewers have different opinions. Here's my analysis of your edit:
The original answer is well-written, with both English and a short code sample.
The original answer is accepted, so it has been useful to ...
12
It's more than just discouraging, each rejection has impact on the user suggesting the edit as it might lead to a ban.
Also worth to note that the Community user is rejecting lots of suggested edits, and it looks like it's on a drastic rise. For example on September 18th 2012 it rejected 59 suggested edit while on April 11th 2013 it rejected 112 suggested ...
11
Actually, I'm going to take a different approach to this issue. It's easy to look at a seemingly low quality post, littered with formatting problems, and write it off as content that should be deleted. The problem with this is that when a post is littered with distractions, it's actually more difficult to evaluate it as something that could potentially be ...
9
Yes, it's perfectly alright. Your answer uses Activity and if another user feels that Context is more appropriate, they need to openly explain why, not hide the reason in the suggested edit where people might not even see it. Then, if you feel he's correct, you can edit your answer to reflect that.
Ultimately, he's radically changing your answer. You didn't ...
9
"Radical change" is the right choice here. It's used when "the original meaning or intent of the post would be lost." Most of the edits you linked to contain separate solutions from the original answer, and thus should be separate answers.
The exception is this one, which is either a comment (which it was rejected as) or purely a failed attempt at ...
8
That is, the edit is putting words in the poster's mouth.
I agree with Matthew that "Radical Change" is correct.
But I'd also like to caution you about getting too protective on the original author's behalf: remember, he can always roll back the edit if he doesn't like the tone. Some of those rejected edits you posted in the comments looked ...
8
Moderators see a short excerpt of your answer in the flag queue. This usually helps us make a better decision quickly, but in this specific case that excerpt started with:
You haven't shared enough for us to provide detailed answers...
Coupled with the "not an answer" flag, that excerpt makes the flag look pretty clear-cut. The moderator who ...
7
No, they don't get any special treatment. It's a decline reason like all the others, it doesn't have any side-effects.
There's also nothing a moderator could do, the user is anonymous. There's no account to suspend, anyone visiting the site can make suggested edits.
If you encounter a registered user vandalizing, please use a moderator flag on any of his ...
7
Your suggested change basically eliminates all traces of the previous "vandalism" reason and then people would just be confused what reason to use when there is general vandalism. You're basically requesting an entirely new reason. Defacing in the context of vandalism is not referring at all to new formatting issues or spelling/grammatical errors. It's more ...
7
It looks like Tanner Ewing edited it at about the same time your suggested edit came along, and potentially marked it as Unhelpful[See Comments], and thus it was rejected by Community.
I don't think you did anything wrong, and it appears Tanner (inadvertently) kept most of your changes and added some additional information.
6
RvdK clicked "edit" before you posted your edit, and then submitted his after you submitted yours.
The system noticed this conflict, and because the other user has sufficient reputation to edit posts without review, his edit was chosen as the edit to keep. Your edit was discarded. The way in which it is discarded is for "Community" to reject the proposal.
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5
I believe that the Community user did not reject this edit suggestion. What happens is that when a reviewer clicks Improve button instead of Accept or Reject then unchecks the Suggested edit was helpful checkbox before submitting the edit, the suggestion will show up as rejected by the Community User.
If you look at 3rd revision, you'd see that the answer ...
5
I don't think the custom rejection text is parsed for MarkDown at all. There is no point in inserting a link in it, it's all displayed as plain text, IIRC. – Martijn Pieters 15 mins ago
That's absolutely correct.
5
I don't see what the use would be in this feature. Assuming the user will actually read the rejection reasons for their suggested edit, what benefit comes from including the same reason twice? The user can already see that from the rejection reason the other user typed out. Why does the system need to be modified and made more complicated so that the second ...
4
I've seen enough edit suggestions exactly as you've described and wanted some mechanism to encourage the new content into a new answer completely, attributed to the editor.
Sometimes content that looks really good is suggested, and leaving a comment on the post for the editor "Hey, start a new answer with your suggestion: [suggested edit url]" is worthwhile ...
4
Your edit was a good one: it made the title consistent with the body and with the answers, and added some relevant tags. I would have approved it.
The “invalid edit” rejection reason lumps two different kinds of edits: factually incorrect edits, that introduce mistakes, and invalid use of the Stack Exchange engine, such as posting follow-up questions or ...
4
As I had this happen to me today (on WPSE), I was unsure of whether there was an inherent problem with the edit or not - obviously not.
This should be mandatory as the user being rejected might actually consider the edit to have been rejected by a real reviewer and as you suggest, with no explanation, that's discouraging.
Top suggestion.
3
+1 for this. My feature-request suggested either showing the rejection reason when you hover over the "Reject" button, or showing something like this (inspired from the 10k flag queue);
My reasoning behind this was because you want to see the other reason before casting your vote.
On the other-hand, when you're voting to close a question you've more ...
3
Both the change and the description of the change can only be described as gibberish and can in no way be construed as an attempt to add value to the post. Add that to the fact that the edit takes a code sample and breaks it by changing its behaviour and you've got Vandalism.
Marking a Suggested Edit as Vandalism means that the data is there to be used, if ...
3
The rejection reason should be shown in the review page whatever reason has been selected.
As alternative, I proposed that the rejection dialog box would show the reason selected by the previous user in Allow to see the rejection reason selected from the previous user in the rejection dialog box.
The problem with the suggested edits for tag wikis is that ...
2
It does bother me that edits that should have been some other thing and edits that are mistaken are lumped together. I thought I had a feature request to separate them, but I can't find it.
However, I disagree with lumping mistaken edits with vandalism. They are different things. Vandalism is uncommon, but it is in a class of its own.
Often, I use a custom ...
2
Here's two more I commonly use:
Unfortunately, your flag requested something the software doesn't support
Example of flag: request to merge two answers, where both answers have upvotes
Unclear what action flagger is requesting mods to take
Example of flag: "Question should be edited"
2
Maybe if one of the reviewers rejects it for "copied content" (plagiarism), then one or more of the following occurs:
Before another user can accept or "improve" the edit, a confirmation dialog appears, saying something like, "Another user has found that this content is plagiarized. Please confirm that this is not the case before accepting this edit."
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2
Wholeheartedly agree with this one, it happened to be only a couple of hours ago again, it's disheartening to know that you're trying to make the question / answer better, and it gets shut down with no explanation, there's only really ever 2 possible scenarios:
The person disagrees with your change
The edit submitted was actually wrong
Either way, it ...
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