When reviewing edits that added or removed tag(s), the first thing I do is read the whole post to search a reference to this tag (sometimes using Ctrl+F, but I don't think that I should only consider perfect matches). While many of these edits are (IMO) too minor, some are legitimate, so I try hard to understand why such tag should be removed or added.
Sometimes, this task is so long that this suggested edit got accepted before I completed the review. I personally think that what would help reviewers is highlighting the words matching added/removed tags in the post.
Of course, with such a feature, reviewers would not be supposed to reject all "removed tag" edits only if a matching word is still present, or reject all "added tag" edits only if no matching word is present. But let's imagine these two cases:
A tag was added (e.g. python). In the review page, the matching word (i.e. all occurrences of
Python
orpython
) is highlighted in the compare view. The reviewer first focuses on this(these) occurrence(s). If it's enough to accept the edit, (s)he accepts it. If not, falls back to old-school reviewing.A tag was removed (e.g. python). In the review page, the remaining matching word (i.e. all occurrences of
Python
orpython
) is highlighted in the compare view. The reviewer first focuses on this(these) occurrence(s). If it's enough to accept the edit (e.g. minor reference to Python like "...but it works with Python"), (s)he accepts it. If not, falls back to old-school reviewing. This case is common since novice users let the automatic tags suggestion system add tags for them.
EDIT:
I'm not complaining only on the fact that I don't have enough time to complete the review before another reviewer, but also on the time spent to review the edit (i.e. it would still annoy me even if i am the last and unique SO user on earth! - guess I wouldn't have much to review though...)
I do not propose to automate such reviews (nor encourage automation), I just propose to facilitate it, like the current compare view does (it highlights some elements, but you have to understand the whole context)