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rolling back the feature request change
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I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to the clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (Internet connection issues? UI limitation? I don't know).

I'm worried about how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me", and is there anything I can do to avoid it?

Feature request: warn users submitting suggested edits if another user edited inPerhaps allowing a 30 second window for people to withdraw their edit suggestion would be nice since it gives you chance to see the interim."edited by X" if one exists?

I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to the clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (Internet connection issues? UI limitation? I don't know).

I'm worried about how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me", and is there anything I can do to avoid it?

Feature request: warn users submitting suggested edits if another user edited in the interim.

I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to the clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (Internet connection issues? UI limitation? I don't know).

I'm worried about how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me", and is there anything I can do to avoid it?

Perhaps allowing a 30 second window for people to withdraw their edit suggestion would be nice since it gives you chance to see the "edited by X" if one exists?

added feature request
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I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to the clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (Internet connection issues? UI limitation? I don't know).

I'm worried about how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me", and is there anything I can do to avoid it?

Perhaps allowing a 30 second window for people to withdraw their edit suggestion would be nice since it gives you chance to see the "edited by X"Feature request: warn users submitting suggested edits if one exists?another user edited in the interim.

I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to the clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (Internet connection issues? UI limitation? I don't know).

I'm worried about how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me", and is there anything I can do to avoid it?

Perhaps allowing a 30 second window for people to withdraw their edit suggestion would be nice since it gives you chance to see the "edited by X" if one exists?

I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to the clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (Internet connection issues? UI limitation? I don't know).

I'm worried about how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me", and is there anything I can do to avoid it?

Feature request: warn users submitting suggested edits if another user edited in the interim.

Active reading. Brevity. Expanded.
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Peter Mortensen
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I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to the clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (internetInternet connection issues? UI limitation? idkI don't know).

What I'm worried about is how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me", and if there'sis there anything I can do to avoid it?

Perhaps allowing a 30 second window for people to withdraw their edit suggestion would be nice since it gives you chance to see the "edited by X" if one exists?

I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (internet connection issues? UI limitation? idk).

What I'm worried about is how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me" and if there's anything I can do to avoid it?

Perhaps allowing a 30 second window for people to withdraw their edit suggestion would be nice since it gives you chance to see the "edited by X" if one exists?

I've seen a lot of discussions on meta about how edit suggestions (by users with < 2000 rep) get rejected a lot of the time by subsequent, conflicting edits. I understand that those rejects are an unavoidable limitation of the UI and they don't "count against you" so all good. However, the situation I want to discuss is where the opposite happens. Someone with > 2000 rep edits a post (or OP) about a second before you make your edit and your edits are very similar. Unfortunately, that results in the following situation.

As you can see, my edit got rightfully rejected as it did not contribute anything beneficial to the post. Unfortunately, my edit came about 20 seconds after someone did almost the same edit, which is why my edit ended up being merged as some spacing changes.

Usually, I notice the popup that says there has been a new edit and copy my changes to the clipboard to check what the changes were before I submit my edit to know if it's still worthwhile, but this time I never got that popup for whatever reason (Internet connection issues? UI limitation? I don't know).

I'm worried about how this kind of rejected edit can "count against me", and is there anything I can do to avoid it?

Perhaps allowing a 30 second window for people to withdraw their edit suggestion would be nice since it gives you chance to see the "edited by X" if one exists?

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