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E_net4
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Those edits vary in terms of the value they add to the post. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc.).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better resources for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a fakedistorted assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone (as happened in this case) leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

Those edits vary in terms of the value they add to the post. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc.).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better resources for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a fake assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone (as happened in this case) leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

Those edits vary in terms of the value they add to the post. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc.).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better resources for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a distorted assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone (as happened in this case) leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

Compromise :-)
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Cody Gray Mod
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Those edits vary in terms of the value they add to the post. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc.).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better artifactsresources for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a fake assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone (as happened in this case) leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

Those edits vary in terms of the value they add to the post. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc.).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better artifacts for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a fake assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone (as happened in this case) leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

Those edits vary in terms of the value they add to the post. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc.).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better resources for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a fake assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone (as happened in this case) leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

deleted 9 characters in body
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Cody Gray Mod
  • 244.2k
  • 84
  • 721
  • 763

The added value of thoseThose edits have varying degreesvary in terms of qualitythe value they add to the post. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc.).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better artefactsartifacts for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a fake assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone, like what (as happened in thatthis case,) leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

The added value of those edits have varying degrees of quality. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better artefacts for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a fake assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone, like what happened in that case, leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

Those edits vary in terms of the value they add to the post. I wouldn't want to enumerate every kind of edit which is suitable and always welcome, but here is a relevant subset:

  • Removing noisy meta-commentary such as "hope this helps", "please help me", "thanks", and "Happy New Year";
  • Removing an attempt to answer a question by editing the question;
  • Applying the right kind of formatting (itemizing enumerations, code constructs like this, quoting only where quoting makes sense, etc.).

Other kinds of edits may be under a grey line, but there is generally no reason to roll them back unless important information was removed.

It is unfortunate, but some people are too overprotective of their own posts, as well as for their "original" and "charismatic" form, while often even forgetting that by posting on Stack Overflow, they are handing over the right to distribute and edit them for the betterment of the platform.

Let's not forget why we are editing other people's posts: so that they become better artifacts for future visitors. That the poster wanted to say "hope this helps" should not override the ideal of improving clarity across the repository. Seeing the posts from the given examples, I wouldn't be surprised if you would want to slow down a bit, but it's not exactly these edits that we should be worried about here. This is just another example of someone being unappreciative of curation through editing, deliberately making a fake assessment of quality for the sake of personal identity.

Should anyone (as happened in this case) leave one or more non-constructive comments about how anyone's edits on someone's "special" post are useless, flag them and move along.

See also:

Source Link
E_net4
  • 29.9k
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