Skip to main content
Commonmark migration
Source Link

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

##Edit a post:

Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

##Do not edit a post:

Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

##The Exceptions:

The Exceptions:

  • if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the code has been deprecated or replaced with a different method, or is dangerous/harmful to run, then it can be appropriate to edit it and add a caveat or a notice along with the new way to do it.

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

##Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

##Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

##The Exceptions:

  • if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the code has been deprecated or replaced with a different method, or is dangerous/harmful to run, then it can be appropriate to edit it and add a caveat or a notice along with the new way to do it.

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

The Exceptions:

  • if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the code has been deprecated or replaced with a different method, or is dangerous/harmful to run, then it can be appropriate to edit it and add a caveat or a notice along with the new way to do it.

added 27 characters in body
Source Link
TylerH
  • 21.2k
  • 22
  • 229
  • 328

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

##Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

##Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

##The Exceptions:

  • if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the code has been deprecated or replaced with a different method, or is dangerous/harmful to run, then it can be appropriate to edit it and add a caveat or a notice along with the new way to do it.

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

##Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

##Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

##The Exceptions:

  • if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the code has been deprecated or replaced, is dangerous/harmful to run, then it can be appropriate to edit it and add a caveat or a notice along with the new way to do it.

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

##Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

##Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

##The Exceptions:

  • if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the code has been deprecated or replaced with a different method, or is dangerous/harmful to run, then it can be appropriate to edit it and add a caveat or a notice along with the new way to do it.

added 152 characters in body
Source Link
TylerH
  • 21.2k
  • 22
  • 229
  • 328

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

##Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

##Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

##The ExceptionExceptions:

The exception to this rule is if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the code has been deprecated or replaced, is dangerous/harmful to run, then it can be appropriate to edit it and add a caveat or a notice along with the new way to do it.

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

##Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

##Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

##The Exception:

The exception to this rule is if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

Yes, the rejections are on track. The point of edits are not to improve the technical quality of the code answer; that is you putting words in the answerer's mouth. Regardless of whether the answerer ultimately appreciates the edit, or whether you mean well, that is simply the wrong mechanism for sharing your contribution.

The point of edits is to fix typos, improve readability, and remove inappropriate markdown, grammar, language, etc.

##Edit a post:

  • if its content is structured very poorly or doesn't make use of a Stack Snippet when it should.
  • when there is a link that is dead and needs updating.
  • when someone has asked a question in a very poor or confusing - way and you are able to understand what it is they are trying to get across.
  • when there is inappropriate language or misspelled words, missing commas/periods, etc.
  • when there is fluff such as "thanks", "hope this helps", "hi my name is ...", etc. that can be removed without losing any substantive information.
  • to add information given by the poster in the comments that is relevant, pertinent, or otherwise useful as part of an answer or question.

##Do not edit a post:

  • to add code, remove code, or change existing code.
  • to change someone's indentation from two spaces to four spaces (or similar) or to move brackets to a new line, etc.
  • to change someone's UK English spelling to US English spelling (or vice versa).
  • to change the intent or meaning of the answer.

If you have code to recommend, either add an answer of your own, or simply add a comment under the answer suggesting the addition/change, and let the person who wrote the answer decide whether or not they want to add that code into their answer.

##The Exceptions:

  • if the post is set to Community Wiki and the post has an invitation to edit and improve the post. CW posts are specifically designed to promote collaboration and remove any kind of meaningful "ownership" or reputation incentive for answering.

  • if the code has been deprecated or replaced, is dangerous/harmful to run, then it can be appropriate to edit it and add a caveat or a notice along with the new way to do it.

Source Link
TylerH
  • 21.2k
  • 22
  • 229
  • 328
Loading