Suppose you suggest an edit, and in the explanation box type something like:
”@username Corrected some spelling.”
Will the message go to the username's inbox? (I, for one, don't intend to; I am just curious.)
Suppose you suggest an edit, and in the explanation box type something like:
”@username Corrected some spelling.”
Will the message go to the username's inbox? (I, for one, don't intend to; I am just curious.)
No, no one will be notified when you use @UserName replies in edit descriptions. The only places where @UserName replies work is comments and chat. They don't work in posts (questions and answers), either.
For more information on how comment replies work in comments, see: How do comment @replies work? on the über Meta site.
They shouldn't work in edit descriptions. We're programmers here, so think of edit descriptions as the summary descriptions that you use when checking-in code to your source control system. The who is tracked elsewhere. The revision history shows who made the edit, who wrote the original, etc. All the edit description needs to do is explain the why—why did you make this change?
Some examples of good edit descriptions/reasons/summaries: