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Post Closed as "Not suitable for this site" by pnuts, Stephen RauchMod, HaveNoDisplayName, jhpratt, Nissa
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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Example, this draftthis draft.

The edit introduced plainly incorrect information. The edit was rejected by one user, with a clear reason:

Contains factually incorrect information. I might be mistaken, but after some reading, I don't believe % is a unary operator. I also think that ++ and -- are assignments.

(This reason is correct)

Yet somehow, someone else could simply approve the edit, meaning we'd have to revert the changes, and the earlier rejection is simply ignored.

Example, this draft.

The edit introduced plainly incorrect information. The edit was rejected by one user, with a clear reason:

Contains factually incorrect information. I might be mistaken, but after some reading, I don't believe % is a unary operator. I also think that ++ and -- are assignments.

(This reason is correct)

Yet somehow, someone else could simply approve the edit, meaning we'd have to revert the changes, and the earlier rejection is simply ignored.

Example, this draft.

The edit introduced plainly incorrect information. The edit was rejected by one user, with a clear reason:

Contains factually incorrect information. I might be mistaken, but after some reading, I don't believe % is a unary operator. I also think that ++ and -- are assignments.

(This reason is correct)

Yet somehow, someone else could simply approve the edit, meaning we'd have to revert the changes, and the earlier rejection is simply ignored.

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Cerbrus
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Require more than one reviewer when reviewing documentation changes

Example, this draft.

The edit introduced plainly incorrect information. The edit was rejected by one user, with a clear reason:

Contains factually incorrect information. I might be mistaken, but after some reading, I don't believe % is a unary operator. I also think that ++ and -- are assignments.

(This reason is correct)

Yet somehow, someone else could simply approve the edit, meaning we'd have to revert the changes, and the earlier rejection is simply ignored.