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I am not sure what you are. We will go with unicorn.

Meta doesn't really negatively prevent edits to posts. The community as a whole seems to have a strong foul taste in their mouth when code is edited because it is often changed from its original intent. There has been strong backlash historically of users feeling their posts were "vandalized" from these types of code edits.

Changing the grammar of a post, or making the slightly vague points more concise and clear, is far often still inline with original intent; coincidentally this also correlates with the largest segment of edits (which meta heavily supports). Changing the code to make it clearer can often mean simply changing the indentation - this does make a large difference! However, this is also supported by meta.

Anyway, here is some historical stuff you probably should have reviewed

http://meta.stackexchange.com/a/104095/178816https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/104095/178816

How far can I refactor the code in someone else's question?How far can I refactor the code in someone else's question?

http://meta.stackexchange.com/a/197407/178816https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/197407/178816

When is it appropriate to edit someone else's code?When is it appropriate to edit someone else's code?

When are syntax errors protected from edits?When are syntax errors protected from edits?

etc... this isn't a new topic.

I am not sure what you are. We will go with unicorn.

Meta doesn't really negatively prevent edits to posts. The community as a whole seems to have a strong foul taste in their mouth when code is edited because it is often changed from its original intent. There has been strong backlash historically of users feeling their posts were "vandalized" from these types of code edits.

Changing the grammar of a post, or making the slightly vague points more concise and clear, is far often still inline with original intent; coincidentally this also correlates with the largest segment of edits (which meta heavily supports). Changing the code to make it clearer can often mean simply changing the indentation - this does make a large difference! However, this is also supported by meta.

Anyway, here is some historical stuff you probably should have reviewed

http://meta.stackexchange.com/a/104095/178816

How far can I refactor the code in someone else's question?

http://meta.stackexchange.com/a/197407/178816

When is it appropriate to edit someone else's code?

When are syntax errors protected from edits?

etc... this isn't a new topic.

I am not sure what you are. We will go with unicorn.

Meta doesn't really negatively prevent edits to posts. The community as a whole seems to have a strong foul taste in their mouth when code is edited because it is often changed from its original intent. There has been strong backlash historically of users feeling their posts were "vandalized" from these types of code edits.

Changing the grammar of a post, or making the slightly vague points more concise and clear, is far often still inline with original intent; coincidentally this also correlates with the largest segment of edits (which meta heavily supports). Changing the code to make it clearer can often mean simply changing the indentation - this does make a large difference! However, this is also supported by meta.

Anyway, here is some historical stuff you probably should have reviewed

https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/104095/178816

How far can I refactor the code in someone else's question?

https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/197407/178816

When is it appropriate to edit someone else's code?

When are syntax errors protected from edits?

etc... this isn't a new topic.

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Travis J
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I am not sure what you are. We will go with unicorn.

Meta doesn't really negatively prevent edits to posts. The community as a whole seems to have a strong foul taste in their mouth when code is edited because it is often changed from its original intent. There has been strong backlash historically of users feeling their posts were "vandalized" from these types of code edits.

Changing the grammar of a post, or making the slightly vague points more concise and clear, is far often still inline with original intent; coincidentally this also correlates with the largest segment of edits (which meta heavily supports). Changing the code to make it clearer can often mean simply changing the indentation - this does make a large difference! However, this is also supported by meta.

Anyway, here is some historical stuff you probably should have reviewed

http://meta.stackexchange.com/a/104095/178816

How far can I refactor the code in someone else's question?

http://meta.stackexchange.com/a/197407/178816

When is it appropriate to edit someone else's code?

When are syntax errors protected from edits?

etc... this isn't a new topic.