Skip to main content
18 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Aug 3, 2014 at 3:13 comment added bjb568 @UliKöhler Of course, I won't reject as vandalism if it has anything good.
Aug 3, 2014 at 1:57 comment added Uli Köhler @bjb568 Fully agreed, if the edit itself is bad enough. For example if it introduces spam (or what is clearly an advertisement), even if only in the summary, I'd also consider it clear vandalism. I'm only worried about marking undescriptive summaries as vandalism, even if they are not obviously fully related to the change. Some people are non-native english speakers and I wouldn't really say it's vandalism if you can't clearly express yourself.
Aug 3, 2014 at 0:06 comment added bjb568 @UliKöhler Vandalism is "action involving deliberate destruction of or damage to public or private property". If the edit is bad enough that I'd jokingly do it if I were horrible enough, it is vandalism.
Aug 2, 2014 at 14:56 comment added AstroCB @UliKöhler What you also have to remember is that edit summaries are more than just what you see when you're reviewing suggested edits: they're part of the changelog of a post and they document its edit history. That's why it sometimes bothers me when 2k+ users don't leave a summary for major edits because it obfuscates the edit history with added x characters to body. Sure, some minor edits are self-explanatory and don't need a description, as are some programs that don't need commenting. However, if you're going to make a relatively major edit, consider leaving a summary for clarity.
Aug 2, 2014 at 14:27 comment added Uli Köhler I agree to @hide: Vandalism should left for edits with really bad content (i.e. those shown in the suggested edit review tests). I almost never look at the edit summaries, but rather on the diffs, i.e. what what actually changed. Even though I'd like people (especially myself) to write better summaries, I believe what matters is the edit content itself. Most people often write edit summaries only because you can't submit edits without any summary.
Aug 2, 2014 at 1:50 comment added bjb568 @charlietfl I do, along with the edit content - but only when it's worth it. No, that's definitely not anywhere close to what review is about. Don't be mean to people who have heavy hands :P
Aug 1, 2014 at 23:39 comment added charlietfl well if it bothers you that bad, why not improve the summary if the edit is valid? Isn't that what editing and review is about? Being heavy handed isn't in the spirit of the site
Aug 1, 2014 at 22:53 comment added bjb568 @charlietfl I don't know about you, but i look at the edit summaries on most posts I see.
Aug 1, 2014 at 22:50 comment added charlietfl makes no sense to reject an edit that improves the question for possible readers due to meta data they aren't likely to ever look at
Aug 1, 2014 at 18:37 comment added bjb568 @hyde I don't care about motives. I care about the edit. The edit includes the summary. If the summary is "marriage help +somephonenumber", it is spam, however good the edit is.
Aug 1, 2014 at 18:27 comment added Selali Adobor I'm a long time lurker of StackExchange, but very new registered user. Yet the line "Just no, vandalism however good the edit is." worries me. I've seen good edits, even very short ones, make a mediocre question/answer a near perfect one many times, and it seems silly that the lack of a summary should keep such an edit from being used. I thought the whole point of the summary was to allow someone to skim the revision history of the post. If someone is reviewing it, don't they already have to read the entire diff?
Aug 1, 2014 at 18:19 comment added hyde My two cents: Edit summaries are meta-content. If the edit actually improves the post and you can see the improvement, then a bad summary is no reason to reject it (and leave SO content in a worse state). Also, your list sounds like you also care about editor's motives for doing the edit? This seems rather backwards to me, only result of the edit should matter.
Aug 1, 2014 at 18:13 comment added CodeCaster @jkeuhlen, Rapptz: OP is talking about edits that are summarized as "adding tags for visibility". That is an incorrect reason, tags should be added for relevance.
Aug 1, 2014 at 17:41 comment added Rapptz There's nothing inherently wrong with adding more tags that help the categorisation of the post. If someone tags something c++11 but misses the c++ tag then it's perfectly fine to add the c++ tag.
Aug 1, 2014 at 17:39 comment added jkeuhlen On your second point, Why is it bad to add a tag if that tag should be there? For example, if I look in the Ruby-on-Rails-4 tag ill see posts with no answers and low views. Sometimes I add the generic RoR tag because the question will get more views there and their problem isn't exactly specific to RoR-4 (even though that is the version they are using). Is that a bad edit?
Aug 1, 2014 at 17:31 comment added jmstoker They grow up soooo fast....so discipline them NOW!!
Aug 1, 2014 at 17:21 comment added Braiam Till the user get 2k :P.
Aug 1, 2014 at 16:40 history answered bjb568 CC BY-SA 3.0