I wouldn't neccessarily complain just for having an edit rejected - after all, maybe I thought I was being helpful but others disagreed. That's ok.
Today though I had two edits rejected where it seemed that the reviewer(s) misunderstood what I was trying to do.
I'm not entirely sure whether I shouldn't have been doing this, or whether the reviewers were jumping through quickly without looking at the post in detail first.
The two edits:
- https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/12323323
- https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/12280696
In both these cases, the reasons for rejections would make complete sense if I had just randomly added this text myself. However in the first one, I took this text directly from the author's comment on his post (which I thought would've made more sense - and given more visibility - as an edit to an otherwise sparse post), and the second I simply clarified the title of the post (to make it easier to find/sort) based on what the asker had clearly mentioned twice within the post.
So I guess my question is: while I know I shouldn't add my own content to someone else's post, is it ok to add that author's own content when it clarifies the post? On reflection I would probably say I can understand why the first edit was rejected, but the second seems to me to be entirely useful.
By the way, I will pay more attention to edit summaries for posts like this!