Only the person who rejected can tell you why they did so.
But I'm not sure I'd accept a "code-transcription" edit either. Most likely I'd skip, but it is something that I believe the original author should do, and most importantly transcription could introduce new/different errors that would render the question moot.
Your intentions are good, and your edit was approved in the end, but I have to question how a user who's not prepared to actually copy/paste their own code is going to be ready to support their question so it gets a useful answer anyway.
Until they do, the better move is to close the question so the user can work on it. Providing a working example is their responsability.
As such, an edit like this could be seen by some as a waste of time for other reviewers, since you are asking other users to put a lot of effort to validate your edit (they would have to compare your edit to the screenshot line by line to see it is actually good), for a question that would very likely not be up to scratch if its original user is not willing to do the minimum effort to provide a better quality post.
And the user how voted to reject must certainly was not "a troll". Assuming that someone who votes or act in a way you disagree could be described as such is not a great move.
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to"
and removed a space - at that point I'd probably have stop checking and rejected the edit (assuming I bothered to do a line-by-line comparison at all). I guess that specific difference wouldn't change anything in the execution, but at the very least it's clear that you're not transcribing it exactly, thus there may be other errors.