I've gotten over 350 rep points* since last week for this here Documentation editthis here Documentation edit. I think it made the example better; I'm pleased to have been able to contribute.
On the other hand, rewriting a couple of sentences has gained me more reputation -- even at +5 an upvote instead of +10 -- than any but the top 10 of my Q&A posts (out of over a thousand). That's honestly kind of embarassing. It devalues my answering in my own mind. (Also.) I'm one of nearly 40 editors of that Example as of this moment. There are 22 editors after me. I didn't even create the dang thing: I just expanded it a bit. I don't really want this rep. If it was money, I would donate it to save the whales or something.**
This has been mentioned here and there, but I'm making a concrete proposal that editors of Doc items should not be rewarded the same amount in perpetuity for every upvote. If this is collaboration, where we share the work, let us also share the reward, not multiply it.
Specifically, the value of one's contribution to an Example should diminish proportionate to one of
- The amount of the current version which you are actually responsible for (Ideal, hard)
- Possibly according to a blame line count (Straightforward, slightly game-able)
- The number of editors who have come after you (Easier, still somewhat game-able)
- The amount of time that has passed since your edit (Simplest but least appealing)
Yes, all of these are subject to gaming. But everything is; any of them would be better than the current structure.
I might suggest further that the editors of items be ranked by one of these criteria, and only the top N get rep, in fixed amounts: 12, 10, 8, 6, 5, 4, 3,... (or whatever). Another good option would be simple proportional division of some fixed amount per vote.
*And counting... I swear the achievements box lights up every third time I navigate to a new page.
**Yes, I will use it to post a bounty. (But that also doesn't take it out of the rep-conomy.)