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Searching for user:1116757 [python]user:1116757 [python] show zero results, which indeed may be a good reason to assume this person does not know about its intricacies.

The original sourceoriginal source shows that, even though the answerer did not use Ctrl+K shortcut, someone who is aware of Python's rules should have picked up on that and could have edited it correctly right away.
  
With the edit, the original indentation got destroyedgot destroyed.

Well meant as these edits (surely) are, maybe you should leave a @comment and ask him not to edit Python anymore.

The other example answer was, even in its original state, bad enough to warrant a downvotebad enough to warrant a downvote.

Searching for user:1116757 [python] show zero results, which indeed may be a good reason to assume this person does not know about its intricacies.

The original source shows that, even though the answerer did not use Ctrl+K shortcut, someone who is aware of Python's rules should have picked up on that and could have edited it correctly right away.
  With the edit, the original indentation got destroyed.

Well meant as these edits (surely) are, maybe you should leave a @comment and ask him not to edit Python anymore.

The other example answer was, even in its original state, bad enough to warrant a downvote.

Searching for user:1116757 [python] show zero results, which indeed may be a good reason to assume this person does not know about its intricacies.

The original source shows that, even though the answerer did not use Ctrl+K shortcut, someone who is aware of Python's rules should have picked up on that and could have edited it correctly right away. 
With the edit, the original indentation got destroyed.

Well meant as these edits (surely) are, maybe you should leave a @comment and ask him not to edit Python anymore.

The other example answer was, even in its original state, bad enough to warrant a downvote.

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Jongware
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Searching for user:1116757 [python] show zero results, which indeed may be a good reason to assume this person does not know about its intricacies.

The original source shows that, even though the answerer did not use Ctrl+K shortcut, someone who is aware of Python's rules should have picked up on that and could have edited it correctly right away.
With the edit, the original indentation got destroyed.

Well meant as these edits (surely) are, maybe you should leave a @comment and ask him not to edit Python anymore.

The other example answer was, even in its original state, bad enough to warrant a downvote.