I edited an answer this morning — I think it's worth noting that this is actually my first answer edit — and it was rejected (3 out of 5 voted 'Reject').
The review in question: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/5272793
All three people who chose to reject provided this explanation:
This edit is incorrect or an attempt to reply to or comment on the existing post.
Now, I'm not actually saying they are wrong, but I would like to understand exactly why, so that I don't repeat this in the future.
The way I see it:
- Answers: are used to answer the question,
- Comments on questions: are used to make it clearer, ask more info, propose suggestions and diagnostics,
- Comments on answers: are there to add minor precision, raise interrogation, discuss something about the answer or the way it addresses the question.
Now, I usually edit questions to make them clearer or add information that I could make out from the poster.
If you take a look at the second example in the answer I tried to edit, it seems wrong to me. From my point of view, what is said is wrong or inaccurate at best.
I posted a small comment (because I did not take the time to type it into the interpreter). Then someone corrected my own comment, and after I acknowledged it was indeed an improvement, I tested the code sample in my Python interpreter and only then proposed the edit.
I'm not sure what is "incorrect" about what I wrote, it is not a "reply", and I obviously didn't intend to "comment" since I had done that already. On the contrary, I sincerely thought I was improving this answer. And after all, 2 people agreed with me.
Now, I'd like to have your opinion as to why I am wrong. Maybe what I wrote was incorrect, but I can't see why at the moment.
Here is the post (to see the comments): https://stackoverflow.com/a/24689983/
x
was the iteration variable and that its value is changed each iteration.back ticks
foremphasis
; they're here for adding code.