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Edit:

Here's what Jeff Atwood statedstated back in '09:

Avoid making isolated, trivial edits, as they are the source of much friction

Original post:

As I remember, the original reasons why minor edits were discouraged (feel free to dig through the archives of the SO blog if you want to be sure. I'm just going by my memory) was nothing to do with reviewer time (back then, the reviewer mechanism didn't exist). It was simply that it can come across as harsh, disrespectful and unwelcoming to (new) users. It can seem very intrusive, editing something someone else wrote without their permission, and without first informing them of what you're doing and why.

Having others sneak in and edit what you wrote makes it look like your question wasn't good enough, and might push people towards not asking questions again in the future.

If I wrote something on SO, I am glad to see others substantially improve it, but it is still my question or answer, but it does seem disrespectful if others start ticking off typos or bad grammar in it for no other reason than because they can and have nothing better to do.

It's like if you go to a restaurant and pull out a marker to correct a typo on their menu. No one asked you to do that, and while yes, they should get it fixed for their own sake, it just seems petty and disrespectful to unilaterally correct it.

SO has already slid heavily towards favoring and encouraging reviewers and editors, at the cost of making it a less welcoming place for people writing actual content. The "don't make minor, trivial edits" rule was a simple guideline to not alienate users by having what they wrote changed under their feet.

Edit:

Here's what Jeff Atwood stated back in '09:

Avoid making isolated, trivial edits, as they are the source of much friction

Original post:

As I remember, the original reasons why minor edits were discouraged (feel free to dig through the archives of the SO blog if you want to be sure. I'm just going by my memory) was nothing to do with reviewer time (back then, the reviewer mechanism didn't exist). It was simply that it can come across as harsh, disrespectful and unwelcoming to (new) users. It can seem very intrusive, editing something someone else wrote without their permission, and without first informing them of what you're doing and why.

Having others sneak in and edit what you wrote makes it look like your question wasn't good enough, and might push people towards not asking questions again in the future.

If I wrote something on SO, I am glad to see others substantially improve it, but it is still my question or answer, but it does seem disrespectful if others start ticking off typos or bad grammar in it for no other reason than because they can and have nothing better to do.

It's like if you go to a restaurant and pull out a marker to correct a typo on their menu. No one asked you to do that, and while yes, they should get it fixed for their own sake, it just seems petty and disrespectful to unilaterally correct it.

SO has already slid heavily towards favoring and encouraging reviewers and editors, at the cost of making it a less welcoming place for people writing actual content. The "don't make minor, trivial edits" rule was a simple guideline to not alienate users by having what they wrote changed under their feet.

Edit:

Here's what Jeff Atwood stated back in '09:

Avoid making isolated, trivial edits, as they are the source of much friction

Original post:

As I remember, the original reasons why minor edits were discouraged (feel free to dig through the archives of the SO blog if you want to be sure. I'm just going by my memory) was nothing to do with reviewer time (back then, the reviewer mechanism didn't exist). It was simply that it can come across as harsh, disrespectful and unwelcoming to (new) users. It can seem very intrusive, editing something someone else wrote without their permission, and without first informing them of what you're doing and why.

Having others sneak in and edit what you wrote makes it look like your question wasn't good enough, and might push people towards not asking questions again in the future.

If I wrote something on SO, I am glad to see others substantially improve it, but it is still my question or answer, but it does seem disrespectful if others start ticking off typos or bad grammar in it for no other reason than because they can and have nothing better to do.

It's like if you go to a restaurant and pull out a marker to correct a typo on their menu. No one asked you to do that, and while yes, they should get it fixed for their own sake, it just seems petty and disrespectful to unilaterally correct it.

SO has already slid heavily towards favoring and encouraging reviewers and editors, at the cost of making it a less welcoming place for people writing actual content. The "don't make minor, trivial edits" rule was a simple guideline to not alienate users by having what they wrote changed under their feet.

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Edit:

Here's what Jeff Atwood stated back in '09:

Avoid making isolated, trivial edits, as they are the source of much friction

Original post:

As I remember, the original reasons why minor edits were discouraged (feel free to dig through the archives of the SO blog if you want to be sure. I'm just going by my memory) was nothing to do with reviewer time (back then, the reviewer mechanism didn't exist). It was simply that it can come across as harsh, disrespectful and unwelcoming to (new) users. It can seem very intrusive, editing something someone else wrote without their permission, and without first informing them of what you're doing and why.

Having others sneak in and edit what you wrote makes it look like your question wasn't good enough, and might push people towards not asking questions again in the future.

If I wrote something on SO, I am glad to see others substantially improve it, but it is still my question or answer, but it does seem disrespectful if others start ticking off typos or bad grammar in it for no other reason than because they can and have nothing better to do.

It's like if you go to a restaurant and pull out a marker to correct a typo on their menu. No one asked you to do that, and while yes, they should get it fixed for their own sake, it just seems petty and disrespectful to unilaterally correct it.

SO has already slid heavily towards favoring and encouraging reviewers and editors, at the cost of making it a less welcoming place for people writing actual content. The "don't make minor, trivial edits" rule was a simple guideline to not alienate users by having what they wrote changed under their feet.

As I remember, the original reasons why minor edits were discouraged (feel free to dig through the archives of the SO blog if you want to be sure. I'm just going by my memory) was nothing to do with reviewer time (back then, the reviewer mechanism didn't exist). It was simply that it can come across as harsh, disrespectful and unwelcoming to (new) users. It can seem very intrusive, editing something someone else wrote without their permission, and without first informing them of what you're doing and why.

Having others sneak in and edit what you wrote makes it look like your question wasn't good enough, and might push people towards not asking questions again in the future.

If I wrote something on SO, I am glad to see others substantially improve it, but it is still my question or answer, but it does seem disrespectful if others start ticking off typos or bad grammar in it for no other reason than because they can and have nothing better to do.

It's like if you go to a restaurant and pull out a marker to correct a typo on their menu. No one asked you to do that, and while yes, they should get it fixed for their own sake, it just seems petty and disrespectful to unilaterally correct it.

SO has already slid heavily towards favoring and encouraging reviewers and editors, at the cost of making it a less welcoming place for people writing actual content. The "don't make minor, trivial edits" rule was a simple guideline to not alienate users by having what they wrote changed under their feet.

Edit:

Here's what Jeff Atwood stated back in '09:

Avoid making isolated, trivial edits, as they are the source of much friction

Original post:

As I remember, the original reasons why minor edits were discouraged (feel free to dig through the archives of the SO blog if you want to be sure. I'm just going by my memory) was nothing to do with reviewer time (back then, the reviewer mechanism didn't exist). It was simply that it can come across as harsh, disrespectful and unwelcoming to (new) users. It can seem very intrusive, editing something someone else wrote without their permission, and without first informing them of what you're doing and why.

Having others sneak in and edit what you wrote makes it look like your question wasn't good enough, and might push people towards not asking questions again in the future.

If I wrote something on SO, I am glad to see others substantially improve it, but it is still my question or answer, but it does seem disrespectful if others start ticking off typos or bad grammar in it for no other reason than because they can and have nothing better to do.

It's like if you go to a restaurant and pull out a marker to correct a typo on their menu. No one asked you to do that, and while yes, they should get it fixed for their own sake, it just seems petty and disrespectful to unilaterally correct it.

SO has already slid heavily towards favoring and encouraging reviewers and editors, at the cost of making it a less welcoming place for people writing actual content. The "don't make minor, trivial edits" rule was a simple guideline to not alienate users by having what they wrote changed under their feet.

Source Link

As I remember, the original reasons why minor edits were discouraged (feel free to dig through the archives of the SO blog if you want to be sure. I'm just going by my memory) was nothing to do with reviewer time (back then, the reviewer mechanism didn't exist). It was simply that it can come across as harsh, disrespectful and unwelcoming to (new) users. It can seem very intrusive, editing something someone else wrote without their permission, and without first informing them of what you're doing and why.

Having others sneak in and edit what you wrote makes it look like your question wasn't good enough, and might push people towards not asking questions again in the future.

If I wrote something on SO, I am glad to see others substantially improve it, but it is still my question or answer, but it does seem disrespectful if others start ticking off typos or bad grammar in it for no other reason than because they can and have nothing better to do.

It's like if you go to a restaurant and pull out a marker to correct a typo on their menu. No one asked you to do that, and while yes, they should get it fixed for their own sake, it just seems petty and disrespectful to unilaterally correct it.

SO has already slid heavily towards favoring and encouraging reviewers and editors, at the cost of making it a less welcoming place for people writing actual content. The "don't make minor, trivial edits" rule was a simple guideline to not alienate users by having what they wrote changed under their feet.