My suggested edit for this question was recently rejected. I can handle rejection--it has happened before, and will surely happen again--but the reasons involved confuse me.
The details of my edit were:
- I corrected capitalization in the body of the question
- I added a snippet which incorporated the author's (unedited) code into a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example, so others could see the problem in action (the result was broken just like how the author described).
My edit comment ("Added MCVE, fixed spelling.") may be the root of all this, but the rejection comments don't line up with that either.
I also described what I had done in a comment on the post, and suggested the author make further edits to include more information.
The edit was rejected 2-1, with the following rejection reasons:
This edit was intended to address the author of the post and makes no sense as an edit. It should have been written as a comment or an answer.
Which is the "attempt to reply" rejection reason--clearly I was not attempting to answer the question. The author's code was copied into the example verbatim, with no attempt to edit or fix it. Further, I reserved my request for more information to my comment, not the edit.
This edit deviates from the original intent of the post. Even edits that must make drastic changes should strive to preserve the goals of the post's owner.
Which is the "clearly conflicts with author's intent" rejection reason. Again, I didn't alter the author's words, nor the code they provided. All I did was put it into an example which demonstrated the issue for which they were requesting assistance.
To sum it up, I really did very little in the edit, other than provide an example of the author's problem--not an answer--using the author's original code. Why then was the edit rejected for the reasons given, neither of which seem to relate to the actions I actually took?