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Jun 7, 2021 at 18:19 comment added PM 2Ring @Braiam FWIW, I often find your posts helpful. However, I sometimes find your posts difficult to understand, and sometimes I just skip them because I can't figure out what you're trying to say or imply. Perhaps it's a language barrier issue. I'm not saying that you have poor English skills, but you have a tendency to use English in a way that seems alien to me (a native speaker of 50+ years experience).
Jun 7, 2021 at 18:15 comment added PM 2Ring @Braiam The OP said "answer [...] basically contains all the information I needed to solve the issue, but in a way I find confusing". So the answer helped them, "but [it was] mixed up with counterproductive advice". So they want to present the useful info they were able to extract, and present it in a less confusing fashion.
Jun 7, 2021 at 17:58 comment added Braiam @PM2Ring it's helpful or confusing, both characteristics are orthogonal.
Jun 7, 2021 at 14:12 comment added PM 2Ring @Braiam It would be more helpful if it were less confusing.
Jun 7, 2021 at 14:05 comment added Braiam @PM2Ring how can an answer be helpful and confusing. It's not helpful if you are confused by it, no?
Jun 4, 2021 at 14:17 comment added PM 2Ring @Anonymous Anne found the answer helpful but confusing. So she should use comments to encourage the author to eliminate that confusion. If she edits the answer, not only does she change the post from the author's original intent, there's the risk that she could introduce incorrect information. Instead, she has written her own answer, in her own words, using the information she has distilled from that other answer, and if there are any errors or lack of clarity in her answer then people can point them out in comments.
Jun 4, 2021 at 13:24 comment added Anonymous @PM2Ring The OP understands the answer, but feels that others might not, so the OP has all of the clarification they need already...
Jun 4, 2021 at 10:02 comment added PM 2Ring If an answer has unclear or dubious content, request clarification in a comment. That's one of the main reasons that comments exist!
Jun 4, 2021 at 3:35 comment added Peter Cordes ... unless (as you say) you get permission in comments from the author. I've done that a few times, where I commented but they weren't understanding what I was trying to explain in comments. So I just fixed / rewrote some parts of the answer, and left a comment. Pretty much every time, such edits have been appreciated, often with the user thanking me for improving their own understanding of the subject. Even if you don't have 2k rep edit privileges, if you submit an edit while the other user is active (after they reply to a comment), they can see your edit and approve (or not) before the Q
Jun 4, 2021 at 3:32 comment added Peter Cordes @cigien: It's a judgement call sometimes. If an answer proposed useful actual code, but then cites some incorrect reasons why it's a good approach, IMO it's ok to fact-check the justification. Their intent was to justify why this code / piece of advice is good in terms of (for example) how CPU architecture and/or compilers work. Not specifically to mislead readers about how CPUs work / why something is a good idea. Of course, if they've built too much explanation on a totally false premise, there's sometimes no saving it, and rewriting whole paragraphs is usually too big an edit.
Jun 4, 2021 at 0:58 comment added cigien I meant that you should ask for clarification in the comments. I know it can be hard to communicate what edits you'd like to make in that fashion, but note that if you suggest an edit, and the OP doesn't see it, it gets sent to the review queue, where it's likely to get rejected if it's a substantial change, or changes the intent. It also creates additional work for other users, which is avoidable. If you have full edit privileges, you could edit anyway, but then leave a comment telling the author what you were trying to do, and mention that they should rollback if they don't approve.
Jun 4, 2021 at 0:54 comment added Anonymous @cigien Not if they don't submit the edit in the first place, as you suggested...
Jun 4, 2021 at 0:52 comment added cigien You can ask the OP for clarification. OP may edit the answer themsleves, or if they confirm that your suggestion is fine, then making the edit is ok. If in doubt, avoid making the edit.
Jun 4, 2021 at 0:47 comment added Anonymous @cigien What if you're unsure?
Jun 4, 2021 at 0:28 comment added cigien Actually, you shouldn't submit an edit that changes the author's intent ever. This is true even if you have full editing privileges. Downvote if the answer is not useful and/or write a separate answer in that case. Edits should only be made to clean up posts, clarify wording, etc, and never to change the intent.
Jun 4, 2021 at 0:26 comment added Anonymous Try submitting an edit anyway, if that gets rejected it's probably a good idea to post it as a separate answer.
Jun 4, 2021 at 0:21 comment added Anne Aunyme In this case I am not sure I agree with the original intent of the post, so I'd have to distract from it. (It contains the info but they are not presented as the answer to my problem)
Jun 4, 2021 at 0:11 history edited 0Valt CC BY-SA 4.0
minor editorial change, fixed run-on sentence
Jun 3, 2021 at 23:27 history edited Anonymous CC BY-SA 4.0
changed "question" to "answer"
Jun 3, 2021 at 23:21 history answered Anonymous CC BY-SA 4.0