In this question the OP asks for a problem with IntelliJ Idea not seeing a type, however he provided an invalid example:
public class A { ... some stuff here ...}
public class B {
public static void main(String[] args){
A myVar = 1234;
}
}
On a later line he then says the example doesn't work bat the problem isn't the 1234 but that IntelliJ doesn't see A. I then suggested a change of 1234
to new A()
to make the example correct.
https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/5704053
However it was rejected for changing the intent, however I think it instead made the question follow the intent more as OP also says in a comment to one of the answers.
It seems that this is a common issue on SO (also read the question to that answer).
Some suggestions I've found on the meta include:
- Re-post the edit. This just feels wrong.
- Post a comment. I don't want to do this, since the question is over 2 years old, and the OP has even stated this in his own comments.
What can I do in this situation? Do you think it should have been rejected?
EDIT: I posted this question hoping I would get information on how to improve my edits. All I got is If the OP thinks the edit is correct, he should post it himself. This however makes me ask, why is the edit system in place? It's clearly not used as is described:
How to Edit
- fix grammatical or spelling errors
- clarify meaning without changing it
- correct minor mistakes
- add related resources or links
- always respect the original author
If the OP said the code doesn't really matter, why is correcting it incorrect? I feel like the edit system is thought of as "change unreadable formatting into readable" and not "improve answer/question". I clearly did what is described in point 2 - clarify meaning. I changed the code according to his OWN comments.
Also, I'm curious why are so many people down-voting this question (not angry, just curious). Are you seriously reading the whole question with comments or just down-voting because it's related to edits? Could every down-voter at least leave a comment?
EDIT2: Noticed a similar question in Related. I feel like my question is very similar to that one but it's taken much more negatively, anyone care to explain?