Sorry about the communications breakdown up until now.
The user edited the question again, reintroducing the changes I had rolled back.
In fact, I simply rolled back your rollback.
As a hint for the rollback interface: you can roll back multiple revisions at once. Each prior revision has its own "Rollback" link, meaning "restore the post to how it was as of this edit". I notice in the post history that you initially struggled with this a bit. (I made my original changes in two separate edits - one for the post body and one for the title.)
I then created a dedicated chatroom for the user and me, inviting them to talk about the dissent. After 7 days, I didn't get a reaction.
I definitely did reply to you. I think what must have happened is that I replied in the chat created for your first comment, and then overlooked the invitation to the dedicated (separate) room.
At any rate, I've been relatively busy lately. Time zones (and individual sleep schedules) can also cause problems in this sort of situation, generally speaking.
It is always appropriate, IMO, to take the matter here directly. Please use the specific-question tag (it has been added for you here already).
As you've seen, there is no DM system, but you can invite users to chat directly. More generally, consider commenting on the question itself and @
-ing the user who made the edit(s). To my understanding, this should work, and it may allow for a quick explanation that doesn't require going in to chat.
Can I decide on the content of my post, or do I have to accept the user's decision?
Editing questions and answers on Stack Overflow is a collaborative process, like on Wikipedia. Users with at least 2000 reputation are privileged to make such edits unilaterally, and to roll back edits unilaterally; and everyone else can propose edits that are put in a queue for consideration.
In principle, therefore, everyone has a say in the editing of posts, including the author. However, authors do not "own" the content here; it is licensed irrevocably to the site under a permissive Creative Commons license, which enables those edits.
We do want to avoid going around in circles on matters of style, and there has historically been a ton of discussion on Meta about what kinds of style edits are appropriate and what variation in style is acceptable. But in general, an author whose post is edited can expect to be out-voted - especially when the edit has a basis in policy. In short, these changes were not simply about "style", but about the site's goals for clarity, focus, precision and overall quality.
In this case, my primary goal was to remove "noise" from the post, by describing concepts directly (using the appropriate jargon) and avoiding unnecessary "introductory" phrases such as "So, the question is:". I also eliminated or minimized some explanations for related concepts by linking to the corresponding related Q&A on the site. For example, I took out the REPL example using or
because it's simply demonstrating the concept of short-circuiting, which is well covered elsewhere. The edited version now fits neatly on my screen, which is a nice property for questions.
Then I gave the question a longer, more descriptive title: I made it an actual question (with a question mark and everything), and replaced the term "lazy evaluation" with a more concrete description. The goal is to make the question more recognizable and more searchable. Hopefully this way, people who need this information have a better chance of finding it with a search engine; people who click through to it from a search page (either on Stack Overflow or from external search) will take less time to verify that it's the question they're trying to answer; and other curators will be able to close duplicates more quickly and more accurately. This edit also improves visibility for some related questions (and I made similar changes elsewhere to promote this one appropriately).
In fact, I think this self-answered Q&A of yours was already quite good by the standards of the site, and very useful - I've used it to close other duplicates several times. As someone who wears a "curator" hat around here, I want to make questions like this even better - as good as they can be - and make it clear to others that this is the right duplicate target to use when someone else asks the same question.
Like it says in the tour:
Our goal is to have the best answers to every question, so if you see questions or answers that can be improved, you can edit them.
We close duplicates so that the best answers can all be in one place. Once we've chosen that place, we should be focused on quality.
So I'd like to invite you to take it as a compliment when someone cares enough about your already-well-received self-answered Q&A to try to make it even better.