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We have received complaints about some recent edits that inserted Swift 3 code into Swift 2 answers. One such example is herehere. Moderators have rolled back these edits, only to have them reinstated.

On the one hand, the movement from Swift 2 to Swift 3 resulted in some significant API changes, so many answers no longer apply in the older version of the language. On the other, the general consensus is that existing answers by one person should not be edited by another to include new code. In fact, a smaller discussion has already been had about suggested edits inserting Swift 3 code.

Personally, I think these kinds of edits are problematic, because they slip unverified code in after the community has voted on the original state of the answer. I've seen enough cases of code edits breaking answers or injecting bad code that I'm wary of anything not vetted by the community. However, I believe the people providing these edits genuinely mean to keep things current.

Does the community believe that these are acceptable edits?

We have received complaints about some recent edits that inserted Swift 3 code into Swift 2 answers. One such example is here. Moderators have rolled back these edits, only to have them reinstated.

On the one hand, the movement from Swift 2 to Swift 3 resulted in some significant API changes, so many answers no longer apply in the older version of the language. On the other, the general consensus is that existing answers by one person should not be edited by another to include new code. In fact, a smaller discussion has already been had about suggested edits inserting Swift 3 code.

Personally, I think these kinds of edits are problematic, because they slip unverified code in after the community has voted on the original state of the answer. I've seen enough cases of code edits breaking answers or injecting bad code that I'm wary of anything not vetted by the community. However, I believe the people providing these edits genuinely mean to keep things current.

Does the community believe that these are acceptable edits?

We have received complaints about some recent edits that inserted Swift 3 code into Swift 2 answers. One such example is here. Moderators have rolled back these edits, only to have them reinstated.

On the one hand, the movement from Swift 2 to Swift 3 resulted in some significant API changes, so many answers no longer apply in the older version of the language. On the other, the general consensus is that existing answers by one person should not be edited by another to include new code. In fact, a smaller discussion has already been had about suggested edits inserting Swift 3 code.

Personally, I think these kinds of edits are problematic, because they slip unverified code in after the community has voted on the original state of the answer. I've seen enough cases of code edits breaking answers or injecting bad code that I'm wary of anything not vetted by the community. However, I believe the people providing these edits genuinely mean to keep things current.

Does the community believe that these are acceptable edits?

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

We have received complaints about some recent edits that inserted Swift 3 code into Swift 2 answers. One such example is here. Moderators have rolled back these edits, only to have them reinstated.

On the one hand, the movement from Swift 2 to Swift 3 resulted in some significant API changessome significant API changes, so many answers no longer apply in the older version of the language. On the other, the general consensus is that existing answers by one person should not be edited by another to include new code. In fact, a smaller discussion has already been had about suggested edits inserting Swift 3 codesuggested edits inserting Swift 3 code.

Personally, I think these kinds of edits are problematic, because they slip unverified code in after the community has voted on the original state of the answer. I've seen enough cases of code edits breaking answers or injecting bad code that I'm wary of anything not vetted by the community. However, I believe the people providing these edits genuinely mean to keep things current.

Does the community believe that these are acceptable edits?

We have received complaints about some recent edits that inserted Swift 3 code into Swift 2 answers. One such example is here. Moderators have rolled back these edits, only to have them reinstated.

On the one hand, the movement from Swift 2 to Swift 3 resulted in some significant API changes, so many answers no longer apply in the older version of the language. On the other, the general consensus is that existing answers by one person should not be edited by another to include new code. In fact, a smaller discussion has already been had about suggested edits inserting Swift 3 code.

Personally, I think these kinds of edits are problematic, because they slip unverified code in after the community has voted on the original state of the answer. I've seen enough cases of code edits breaking answers or injecting bad code that I'm wary of anything not vetted by the community. However, I believe the people providing these edits genuinely mean to keep things current.

Does the community believe that these are acceptable edits?

We have received complaints about some recent edits that inserted Swift 3 code into Swift 2 answers. One such example is here. Moderators have rolled back these edits, only to have them reinstated.

On the one hand, the movement from Swift 2 to Swift 3 resulted in some significant API changes, so many answers no longer apply in the older version of the language. On the other, the general consensus is that existing answers by one person should not be edited by another to include new code. In fact, a smaller discussion has already been had about suggested edits inserting Swift 3 code.

Personally, I think these kinds of edits are problematic, because they slip unverified code in after the community has voted on the original state of the answer. I've seen enough cases of code edits breaking answers or injecting bad code that I'm wary of anything not vetted by the community. However, I believe the people providing these edits genuinely mean to keep things current.

Does the community believe that these are acceptable edits?

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Brad Larson Mod
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Are edits that insert Swift 3 code into existing Swift 2 answers acceptable?

We have received complaints about some recent edits that inserted Swift 3 code into Swift 2 answers. One such example is here. Moderators have rolled back these edits, only to have them reinstated.

On the one hand, the movement from Swift 2 to Swift 3 resulted in some significant API changes, so many answers no longer apply in the older version of the language. On the other, the general consensus is that existing answers by one person should not be edited by another to include new code. In fact, a smaller discussion has already been had about suggested edits inserting Swift 3 code.

Personally, I think these kinds of edits are problematic, because they slip unverified code in after the community has voted on the original state of the answer. I've seen enough cases of code edits breaking answers or injecting bad code that I'm wary of anything not vetted by the community. However, I believe the people providing these edits genuinely mean to keep things current.

Does the community believe that these are acceptable edits?