The current behavior is like this:
Not quite...
Sorry to be pedantic here, but I just had to correct an edit to an old answer, and I suspect there's some misinformation floating around.
(Ok, I still occasionally read the SOCVR (Stack Overflow Close Vote Reviewers), so I know there's some misinformation floating around)
This bug is somewhat more complicated than just "if you vote and edit it invalidates the review". I went into detail on this in the answer you linked, but to summarize:
- The edit has to be what actually put the question into review.
- The reopen vote has to come after the edit has already put the question into review - this means after the edit is submitted and after the queue is next synchronized (this may have changed and probably will change in the future; used to be every 5 minutes or thereabouts).
- There cannot be any other reopen votes older than 15 minutes when the queue is synced - that's what makes the vote ineligible, while the vote also makes the edit ineligible.
IOWIn other words, it's a bit harder to hit this bug than it sounds. Not that that makes it any less crappy; to avoid it with certainty, you either have to already know it exists before you edit, or you have to possess information about the state of review that is not easily possible for you to possess. That is entirely unreasonable!
Back when I first encountered this, I checked for other occurrences; it was very rare. It might be more common now though, especially on Stack Overflow: changes to closing at the tail end of 2019 resulted in a significant increase in reopen vote effectiveness and in voting - if that result held over time (I have no way of knowing), then it stands to reason more folks would hit bugs related to reopen votes. IOWIn other words: even though this requires a fairly specific set of circumstances, those circumstances might exist more often now than they once did.
I would strongly encourage the team to actually investigate this (or just exclude reopen votes from invalidating the task and the 15 minute waiting period - both are based on assumptions made almost 9 years ago now, are very unlikely to be needed anymore, and make the query unnecessarily complicated).
But for the rest of us, it's not worth worrying about too much; if you want to be extra-sure to avoid it, just get in the habit of voting immediately before submitting an edit. And note that edits made from the reopen queue are recorded at the same time as the associated vote, and thus are also immune from this bug (even if something else were to remove the initial trigger that enqueued the post).