First off, I love that we as a community have come to equate answering questions (well) with expertise in a technology. If you asked me to select authors to write about C#, this would be my dream team. As it turns out, many of these folks already write blogs, articles, documentation and books about C#. If you want to read about C#, don't come to Stack Overflow Documentation. Instead go to their user profiles and see what else they've written. We honestly don't mind.
If we were angling to compete against that sort of writing, we'd probably want to limit Documentation to gold badge holders. (And we'd probably have to offer them a salary too.) So anything short of that standard is a compromise of quality. Thankfully, we pursing examples that look a little different.
Going back to the original vision of Stack Overflow:
The idea that you have all these experts waiting in the wings to do stuff is an illusion in my experience. There's really just a bunch of amateurs muddling along trying to do things together. The people that are truly experts are too busy to even help, right? And if the experts are too busy to help, what difference does it really make if there are experts at all. Because the whole point of this endeavor is helping other developers, and whether you're an expert or not, if you have no time to help, you're not really contributing to the solution.
Fundamentally, the idea behind both Q&A and Documentation is the same: harness the moments of downtime that most programmers have to create something useful. (As an aside, we are extraordinarily lucky that some experts have stepped up to help out over the years.) It's certainly possible that the skills needed to write good examples are the same as the skill needed to answer questions. But I think they are notably different. If nothing else, Documentation is designed to be more collaborative than Q&A.
Instead of limiting contributions to people who clear an arbitrary (if rational) bar, we are taking the opposite strategy of allowing everyone to contribute. Instead of vetting authors and only picking the best, we are swiping Wikipedia's procrastination principle: we'll won't solve problems that have not yet arisen.
I don't see any obvious problems with the preprocessor topic. Presumably one or more of these edits fixed them. I notice that one low-reputation user with no C++ answers proposed a small, but useful correction. If edits were limited by tag score, that change would likely have had to wait. Instead of limiting contributions, the solution in almost every case ought to be to encourage corrective edits.