Skip to main content
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

Was I right to edit the question?

Yes. Your suggested edit was fine:

  • it didn't change the original intent of the question
  • it improved the content of the question
  • it added additional information that the author has posted outside the question.

However, your edit summary suggested that you actually added an answer into the question. Also, even though "how can i add "\n\t" between elements" and "How can I insert a tag on a new line with proper indentation?" are semantically the same, the latter focuses on the insertion of the tag, whereas the first focuses on "\n\t".

This probably lead to the rejection: a bunch of code of unknown origin (reviewers can't see the answer), and a changed question sentence. As Mat noted, a longer edit summary would have helped.

For the next time:

  • make sure that your edit summary contains all information a possible reviewer needs,
  • make sure that the original intend stays the same for a reviewer.

See also

Was I right to edit the question?

Yes. Your suggested edit was fine:

  • it didn't change the original intent of the question
  • it improved the content of the question
  • it added additional information that the author has posted outside the question.

However, your edit summary suggested that you actually added an answer into the question. Also, even though "how can i add "\n\t" between elements" and "How can I insert a tag on a new line with proper indentation?" are semantically the same, the latter focuses on the insertion of the tag, whereas the first focuses on "\n\t".

This probably lead to the rejection: a bunch of code of unknown origin (reviewers can't see the answer), and a changed question sentence. As Mat noted, a longer edit summary would have helped.

For the next time:

  • make sure that your edit summary contains all information a possible reviewer needs,
  • make sure that the original intend stays the same for a reviewer.

See also

Was I right to edit the question?

Yes. Your suggested edit was fine:

  • it didn't change the original intent of the question
  • it improved the content of the question
  • it added additional information that the author has posted outside the question.

However, your edit summary suggested that you actually added an answer into the question. Also, even though "how can i add "\n\t" between elements" and "How can I insert a tag on a new line with proper indentation?" are semantically the same, the latter focuses on the insertion of the tag, whereas the first focuses on "\n\t".

This probably lead to the rejection: a bunch of code of unknown origin (reviewers can't see the answer), and a changed question sentence. As Mat noted, a longer edit summary would have helped.

For the next time:

  • make sure that your edit summary contains all information a possible reviewer needs,
  • make sure that the original intend stays the same for a reviewer.

See also

spelling
Source Link
Dan Rosenstark
  • 69.6k
  • 16
  • 5

Was I right to edit the question?

Yes. Your suggested edit was fine:

  • it didn't change the original intendintent of the question
  • it improved the content of the question
  • it added additional information that the author has posted outside the question.

However, your edit summary suggested that you actually added an answer into the question. Also, even though "how can i add "\n\t" between elements" and "How can I insert a tag on a new line with proper indentation?" are semantically the same, the latter focuses on the insertion of the tag, whereas the first focuses on "\n\t".

This probably lead to the rejection: a bunch of code of unknown origin (reviewers can't see the answer), and a changed question sentence. As Mat noted, a longer edit summary would have helped.

For the next time:

  • make sure that your edit summary contains all information a possible reviewer needs,
  • make sure that the original intend stays the same for a reviewer.

See also

Was I right to edit the question?

Yes. Your suggested edit was fine:

  • it didn't change the original intend of the question
  • it improved the content of the question
  • it added additional information that the author has posted outside the question.

However, your edit summary suggested that you actually added an answer into the question. Also, even though "how can i add "\n\t" between elements" and "How can I insert a tag on a new line with proper indentation?" are semantically the same, the latter focuses on the insertion of the tag, whereas the first focuses on "\n\t".

This probably lead to the rejection: a bunch of code of unknown origin (reviewers can't see the answer), and a changed question sentence. As Mat noted, a longer edit summary would have helped.

For the next time:

  • make sure that your edit summary contains all information a possible reviewer needs,
  • make sure that the original intend stays the same for a reviewer.

See also

Was I right to edit the question?

Yes. Your suggested edit was fine:

  • it didn't change the original intent of the question
  • it improved the content of the question
  • it added additional information that the author has posted outside the question.

However, your edit summary suggested that you actually added an answer into the question. Also, even though "how can i add "\n\t" between elements" and "How can I insert a tag on a new line with proper indentation?" are semantically the same, the latter focuses on the insertion of the tag, whereas the first focuses on "\n\t".

This probably lead to the rejection: a bunch of code of unknown origin (reviewers can't see the answer), and a changed question sentence. As Mat noted, a longer edit summary would have helped.

For the next time:

  • make sure that your edit summary contains all information a possible reviewer needs,
  • make sure that the original intend stays the same for a reviewer.

See also

Source Link
Zeta
  • 105.7k
  • 16
  • 16

Was I right to edit the question?

Yes. Your suggested edit was fine:

  • it didn't change the original intend of the question
  • it improved the content of the question
  • it added additional information that the author has posted outside the question.

However, your edit summary suggested that you actually added an answer into the question. Also, even though "how can i add "\n\t" between elements" and "How can I insert a tag on a new line with proper indentation?" are semantically the same, the latter focuses on the insertion of the tag, whereas the first focuses on "\n\t".

This probably lead to the rejection: a bunch of code of unknown origin (reviewers can't see the answer), and a changed question sentence. As Mat noted, a longer edit summary would have helped.

For the next time:

  • make sure that your edit summary contains all information a possible reviewer needs,
  • make sure that the original intend stays the same for a reviewer.

See also