Like l4mpi already commented, the number of posts you edit is not really of any concern, but the usefulness of your edits.
Quantity will mostly take care of itself if you properly cater to quality.
An edit is useful if all of these apply:
- The edited post gains value (off-topic questions, spam, NAA and the like always have less than no value!).
- Your edit was comprehensive (You improve on many/all deficits of the post).
- Your post was not radical (The content of the post remain intact).
There are exceptions, but make sure to call it out in the edit summary:
- You moved an integrated answer from the question into its own answer.
- You moved info from the OPs comments into the post.
Do not edit for coding-style, unless there's none (Make it consistent, but refrain from imposing your own).
Do not edit only for grammar, unless it's really horrible. A few small i's where it should be I is ok (Correct it while you are editing it anyway).
If you follow all those points, you will probably get fewer edits done than now, but those will be good edits.
There's one more point: You might refrain from editing many old posts at once, because each edit bumps the questions, and we all love getting the frontpage swamped with ancient questions (admittedly a negligible issue on SO, in contrast to smaller SE-sites).
I
s or similar small grammar mistakes), and make sure the question you're editing is actually worth it and not just crap that's going to be closed anyways. E.g. this seems like an edit you shouldn't have made.review
stuff. Actually there's two sets of tabs -- "active" is not in the same set as "interesting". Split hairs ;) There is a "newest" in one of them, that's what I bookmark.