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add link about editing code
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wjandrea
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For more details, see When should I make edits to code?

For more details, see When should I make edits to code?

Inline code formatting: add link to relevant Meta post and reword accordingly. Add link for more "noise". Typo (reviews → reviewers). Reviewers do see comments. Grammar, clarity, other minor fixes.
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wjandrea
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You should read some of the editing guidelines in the Help Center. But there are some aspects of editing that aren't discussed much in the help centerHelp Center that have been clarified on metaMeta. Keep these things in mind while editing.

You can use inline code formatting to indicate that some snippet of text is actually code. The Markdown syntax for this formatting is to surround the snippet with backticks ( ` usually` the same key as the tilde ~~ on the US layout).

Inline code formatting shows that something is code. Do not use it for anything elsenon-code (e.g., names of products, protocols, file formats, file names, etc.) except in some cases like filenames. It is also not appropriate to use inline code formatting for emphasis (useemphasis; use bold or italics for that, instead).

As has been noted many times on Meta, excessive use of backticks may lead to Lyme disease"Lyme disease". In other words, excessive use of inline code formatting actively harms the readability of posts. Therefore, please use them sparingly.

The purpose of editing is to make a post easier to understand, and easier to find. If a post should be deleted, then flag to close/delete instead.
Editing these posts is sometimes called "turd polishing"—no matter how much you polish a turd, it'll always remain a turd. Similarly, if a post is inherently worthless, it'll always remain worthless, no matter how much you edit it.

The first person personal pronoun in English is "I", not "i".

The The second person personal pronoun in English is "you", not "u".

So So, replace "u" and "i" with "you" and "I".

However, if you have less than 2000 reputation, your edits must be reviewed. So your edit will take your time and that of at least 2 reviewers. This means it is hardly ever worth the effort to remove things like "Hi" and "Thank you".
But if unless you're editing already — remove this noise as well.

In addition to salutations, signatures, valedictions, and taglines, anything in a post that doesn't pertain to the question itself is considered noiseconsidered noise. Common examples of other kinds of noise include, but aren't limited to:

Before you have full editing privileges, you're forced to write an edit summary to explain your edit. These are very important as they add context that reviewsreviewers often lack. Sometimes an edit can seem redundant to a reviewer until they notice that you've left a comment explaining why it matters to change the small detail or replace one link with another. Even with full editing privileges, this is valid context for anyone who checks the history of a question's edits and needs to understand what motivated your edit.
This

This is especially important when editing material from an OP's comments into a post. Edit reviewers don't seemight not notice the comments on a post, so they won't know where your the new material came from. When editing new material into a post, use the Edit Summary to explain where the material came from.

You should read some of the editing guidelines in the Help Center. But there are some aspects of editing that aren't discussed much in the help center that have been clarified on meta. Keep these things in mind while editing.

You can use inline code formatting to indicate that some snippet of text is actually code. The Markdown syntax for this formatting is to surround the snippet with backticks ( ` usually the same key as the tilde ~).

Inline code formatting shows that something is code. Do not use it for anything else (e.g., names of products, protocols, file formats, file names, etc.) It is also not appropriate to use inline code formatting for emphasis (use bold or italics for that, instead).

As has been noted many times on Meta, excessive use of backticks may lead to Lyme disease. In other words, excessive use of inline code formatting actively harms the readability of posts. Therefore, please use them sparingly.

The purpose of editing is to make a post easier to understand, and easier to find. If a post should be deleted, then flag to close/delete instead.
Editing these posts is sometimes called "turd polishing"—no matter how much you polish a turd, it'll always remain a turd. Similarly, if a post is inherently worthless, it'll always remain worthless, no matter how much you edit it.

The first person personal pronoun in English is "I", not "i".

The second person personal pronoun in English is "you", not "u".

So, replace "u" and "i" with "you" and "I".

However, if you have less than 2000 reputation, your edits must be reviewed. So your edit will take your time and that of at least 2 reviewers. This means it is hardly ever worth the effort to remove things like "Hi" and "Thank you".
But if you're editing already — remove this noise as well.

In addition to salutations, signatures, valedictions, and taglines, anything in a post that doesn't pertain to the question itself is considered noise. Common examples of other kinds of noise include, but aren't limited to:

Before you have full editing privileges you're forced to write an edit summary to explain your edit. These are very important as they add context that reviews often lack. Sometimes an edit can seem redundant to a reviewer until they notice that you've left a comment explaining why it matters to change the small detail or replace one link with another. Even with full editing privileges, this is valid context for anyone who checks the history of a question's edits and needs to understand what motivated your edit.
This is especially important when editing material from an OP's comments into a post. Edit reviewers don't see the comments on a post, so they won't know where your the new material came from. When editing new material into a post, use the Edit Summary to explain where the material came from.

You should read some of the editing guidelines in the Help Center. But there are some aspects of editing that aren't discussed much in the Help Center that have been clarified on Meta. Keep these things in mind while editing.

You can use inline code formatting to indicate that some snippet of text is actually code. The Markdown syntax for this formatting is to surround the snippet with backticks (` the same key as the tilde ~ on the US layout).

Do not use it for non-code (e.g., names of products, protocols, file formats) except in some cases like filenames. It is also not appropriate to use inline code formatting for emphasis; use bold or italics for that instead.

As has been noted many times on Meta, excessive use of backticks may lead to "Lyme disease". In other words, excessive use of inline code formatting actively harms the readability of posts. Therefore, please use them sparingly.

The purpose of editing is to make a post easier to understand and easier to find. If a post should be deleted, then flag to close/delete instead.
Editing these posts is sometimes called "turd polishing"—no matter how much you polish a turd, it'll always remain a turd. Similarly, if a post is inherently worthless, it'll always remain worthless, no matter how much you edit it.

The first person personal pronoun in English is "I", not "i". The second person personal pronoun in English is "you", not "u". So, replace "u" and "i" with "you" and "I".

However, if you have less than 2000 reputation, your edits must be reviewed. So your edit will take your time and that of at least 2 reviewers. This means it is hardly ever worth the effort to remove things like "Hi" and "Thank you" unless you're editing already.

In addition to salutations, signatures, valedictions, and taglines, anything in a post that doesn't pertain to the question itself is considered noise. Common examples of other kinds of noise include, but aren't limited to:

Before you have full editing privileges, you're forced to write an edit summary to explain your edit. These are very important as they add context that reviewers often lack. Sometimes an edit can seem redundant to a reviewer until they notice that you've left a comment explaining why it matters to change the small detail or replace one link with another. Even with full editing privileges, this is valid context for anyone who checks the history of a question's edits and needs to understand what motivated your edit.

This is especially important when editing material from an OP's comments into a post. Edit reviewers might not notice the comments on a post, so they won't know where your the new material came from. When editing new material into a post, use the Edit Summary to explain where the material came from.

Add link to canonical post on editing spam
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Ryan M Mod
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When you see a spam post, flag it. This brings it to the attention of the moderators. If you edit it, it is harder for the moderators to see that it was spam. For more information, see Should spam posts be edited? on Meta Stack Exchange.

When you see a spam post, flag it. This brings it to the attention of the moderators. If you edit it, it is harder for the moderators to see that it was spam.

When you see a spam post, flag it. This brings it to the attention of the moderators. If you edit it, it is harder for the moderators to see that it was spam. For more information, see Should spam posts be edited? on Meta Stack Exchange.

added 410 characters in body
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Cody Gray Mod
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Fixed a typo
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Rachid K.
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Commonmark migration
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they changed it to 2 reviewers
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Donald Duck
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Added additional information and examples of what's considered noise.
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BSMP
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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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a post may be bad but still be inspiration for a good one
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Deduplicator
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Added section on "turd polishing". Seen too much of that in the SE review queue lately.
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more accurate information on the "tags in title" policy
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ryanyuyu
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added 610 characters in body
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Reflected discussion of "typography" in comments, added attribution for "casing".
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Mogsdad
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Added a section about tags in titles. I see too many newbie editors thinking that this was necessary.
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Emphasis asks attention _from_ the reader, does not draw it _to_ the reader. Funny how nobody (not even I myself as OP) noticed it!
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added 557 characters in body
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added 556 characters in body
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Oh the ironing
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Lightness Races in Orbit
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spelling
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Blorgbeard
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Snippets; extra heading period
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Nathan Tuggy
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added 528 characters in body
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apaul
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Added edits must be substantial
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ryanyuyu
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Post Made Community Wiki by animusonStaffMod