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Timeline for Discouraging post-and-edit

Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0

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Dec 22, 2016 at 4:40 comment added Shog9 Mod Incidentally, I've addressed the "typo" scenario at length elsewhere (along with some stats on how common it is); if you're interested, I can dig up a link.
Dec 22, 2016 at 4:13 comment added TigerhawkT3 @NathanTuggy - Although it can certainly be disconcerting to see a post evolve like that, I think the harm in such a style is minimal (it's theoretically possible for a reader to see such an incomplete post and immediately rush off to use a non-working code fragment or something, I guess). Weighed against the eventual quality of some of those posts, I don't think such a restriction is worth it.
Dec 22, 2016 at 4:07 comment added Nathan Tuggy @TigerhawkT3: Yeah, SE software doesn't currently implement much of anything to discourage this, technically. It could, but SE has rejected one possible solution (described here). I think your alternative may be worth examining in more detail, though.
Dec 22, 2016 at 4:05 comment added TigerhawkT3 @NathanTuggy - I think the difference is that making edits available for a few minutes but no longer, as with comments, is intended to allow users to address typos, while making edits available indefinitely is intended to allow users to improve their posts with new information over the years. The combination of those - editing a post with substantial amounts of new information in the first few minutes - seems to be a bit of a corner case.
Dec 22, 2016 at 3:50 comment added Nathan Tuggy @TigerhawkT3: If you're implying that the software should prevent posters from making edits until some time has passed (thus locking in initial impression votes), I'd suggest you post that as an alternate approach to the problem. Seems interesting. Shog's description refers to forums using a different theoretically valid solution, simply locking in the basis for all responses after a short time (presumably to prevent any major edits). Both are technical solutions, though.
Dec 22, 2016 at 3:01 comment added TigerhawkT3 This seems to answer the inverse of the posted question, referring to content that can only be changed for a few minutes (generally to correct typos), while the question is about whether answers should be posted only once they're complete, without edits in the next few minutes.
Dec 22, 2016 at 2:04 comment added Zombo Exactly. This question seems counter to one of the great things about this network. I can stroll into a 5 year old question with my current, valid solution and post it. In fact we reward that behavior with badges. Or I can update my old answers to respond to standards changing or software changing. You remove that, and this network can get stale pretty quick
Dec 20, 2016 at 23:53 history answered Shog9Mod CC BY-SA 3.0