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Cody Gray Mod
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First, is it right that my edit should override the review process? I assume "Improve edit" works the same way, but with automatic approval instead of rejection. If reviews of suggested edits are supposed to be like voting, Couldn't people abuse this to cause their desired outcome of the edit review even though their vote was in the minority? Or is it just assumed that, since I can edit anyway, I should be able to do this?

Yes, this is correct. It would be silly to block someone with full edit rights from exercising those rights. It used to be this way, and it finally is no longer with the addition of the "Improve" and "Reject and Edit" buttons.

Second, why can't I apply a rejection reason when I pick "reject and edit"? I would still prefer to indicate why I was rejecting.

I have no idea. Probably because no one has written the code to enable this. Indeed, it does seem reasonable to be able to choose a different one of the canned rejection reasons for cases like this. Plus, it's fun to put words in the mouth of robots.


As for the more general question of "is this how it's supposed to work", I'd say yes. The general idea behind "Reject and Edit", as is obvious from the default rejection reason, is so that you can reject a suggested edit that is "too minor" or otherwise fails to fix the glaring flaws with a post, and then move immediately to actually making those changes yourself. This serves a dual purpose: first, it ensures that the post actually gets improved, and second, it allows your edit to (potentially) serve an instructional purpose for the person who originally suggested the edit (following the logic that suggested edits are "training wheels" for full editing privileges).

That said, I don't think you are abusing the feature in going outside of this narrowly conceived original purpose. It is obviously correct to dispatch an invalid suggested edit, and as already mentioned, since you have full reviewedit privileges, it doesn't make sense to block you from editing the post as you see fit. That just hurts the site.

First, is it right that my edit should override the review process? I assume "Improve edit" works the same way, but with automatic approval instead of rejection. If reviews of suggested edits are supposed to be like voting, Couldn't people abuse this to cause their desired outcome of the edit review even though their vote was in the minority? Or is it just assumed that, since I can edit anyway, I should be able to do this?

Yes, this is correct. It would be silly to block someone with full edit rights from exercising those rights. It used to be this way, and it finally is no longer with the addition of the "Improve" and "Reject and Edit" buttons.

Second, why can't I apply a rejection reason when I pick "reject and edit"? I would still prefer to indicate why I was rejecting.

I have no idea. Probably because no one has written the code to enable this. Indeed, it does seem reasonable to be able to choose a different one of the canned rejection reasons for cases like this. Plus, it's fun to put words in the mouth of robots.


As for the more general question of "is this how it's supposed to work", I'd say yes. The general idea behind "Reject and Edit", as is obvious from the default rejection reason, is so that you can reject a suggested edit that is "too minor" or otherwise fails to fix the glaring flaws with a post, and then move immediately to actually making those changes yourself. This serves a dual purpose: first, it ensures that the post actually gets improved, and second, it allows your edit to (potentially) serve an instructional purpose for the person who originally suggested the edit (following the logic that suggested edits are "training wheels" for full editing privileges).

That said, I don't think you are abusing the feature in going outside of this narrowly conceived original purpose. It is obviously correct to dispatch an invalid suggested edit, and as already mentioned, since you have full review privileges, it doesn't make sense to block you from editing the post as you see fit. That just hurts the site.

First, is it right that my edit should override the review process? I assume "Improve edit" works the same way, but with automatic approval instead of rejection. If reviews of suggested edits are supposed to be like voting, Couldn't people abuse this to cause their desired outcome of the edit review even though their vote was in the minority? Or is it just assumed that, since I can edit anyway, I should be able to do this?

Yes, this is correct. It would be silly to block someone with full edit rights from exercising those rights. It used to be this way, and it finally is no longer with the addition of the "Improve" and "Reject and Edit" buttons.

Second, why can't I apply a rejection reason when I pick "reject and edit"? I would still prefer to indicate why I was rejecting.

I have no idea. Probably because no one has written the code to enable this. Indeed, it does seem reasonable to be able to choose a different one of the canned rejection reasons for cases like this. Plus, it's fun to put words in the mouth of robots.


As for the more general question of "is this how it's supposed to work", I'd say yes. The general idea behind "Reject and Edit", as is obvious from the default rejection reason, is so that you can reject a suggested edit that is "too minor" or otherwise fails to fix the glaring flaws with a post, and then move immediately to actually making those changes yourself. This serves a dual purpose: first, it ensures that the post actually gets improved, and second, it allows your edit to (potentially) serve an instructional purpose for the person who originally suggested the edit (following the logic that suggested edits are "training wheels" for full editing privileges).

That said, I don't think you are abusing the feature in going outside of this narrowly conceived original purpose. It is obviously correct to dispatch an invalid suggested edit, and as already mentioned, since you have full edit privileges, it doesn't make sense to block you from editing the post as you see fit. That just hurts the site.

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Cody Gray Mod
  • 244.2k
  • 84
  • 721
  • 763

First, is it right that my edit should override the review process? I assume "Improve edit" works the same way, but with automatic approval instead of rejection. If reviews of suggested edits are supposed to be like voting, Couldn't people abuse this to cause their desired outcome of the edit review even though their vote was in the minority? Or is it just assumed that, since I can edit anyway, I should be able to do this?

Yes, this is correct. It would be silly to block someone with full edit rights from exercising those rights. It used to be this way, and it finally is no longer with the addition of the "Improve" and "Reject and Edit" buttons.

Second, why can't I apply a rejection reason when I pick "reject and edit"? I would still prefer to indicate why I was rejecting.

I have no idea. Probably because no one has written the code to enable this. Indeed, it does seem reasonable to be able to choose a different one of the canned rejection reasons for cases like this. Plus, it's fun to put words in the mouth of robots.


As for the more general question of "is this how it's supposed to work", I'd say yes. The general idea behind "Reject and Edit", as is obvious from the default rejection reason, is so that you can reject a suggested edit that is "too minor" or otherwise fails to fix the glaring flaws with a post, and then move immediately to actually making those changes yourself. This serves a dual purpose: first, it ensures that the post actually gets improved, and second, it allows your edit to (potentially) serve an instructional purpose for the person who originally suggested the edit (following the logic that suggested edits are "training wheels" for full editing privileges).

That said, I don't think you are abusing the feature in going outside of this narrowly conceived original purpose. It is obviously correct to dispatch an invalid suggested edit, and as already mentioned, since you have full review privileges, it doesn't make sense to block you from editing the post as you see fit. That just hurts the site.