I have suggested an edit to a question about how to display backslashes in C++. The problem is that the OP didn't format his code properly, it was normal text, and to have 2 backslashes appear, he typed 3. Then somebody edited the post for him and formatted the code. At this point, all 3 backslashes were displayed, which is not what the OP wanted. I tried to edit the post and restore the correct number (2); my comment was:
The previous edit added code formatting, which disables the escaping of
\
. The OP had typed 3 of them, to have 2 displayed. Now, with the code formatting, they are all shown, so to restore the original question one backslash must be deleted. Please check previous versions/edits to see what I mean.
So my intent was to restore the original post. The first 2 reviewers understood it, but the last 3 didn't - and ironically their answer was
"This edit deviates from the original intent of the post. Even edits that must make drastic changes should strive to preserve the goals of the post's owner."
The result is that now all the answers look wrong (even the accepted one!), whereas it's actually the question that is now wrong (=different from the original one). So I still think the edit should be approved. This is not even the first time it has happened to me, so I am wondering what I should do now. I think flagging for moderator attention is overkill, and (almost) an abuse of the system. Should I just re-submit my edit and hope to get luckier? Or should I vote to rollback the edit that introduced the problem, and then submit one more myself? (I don't think I can do it on non-wiki posts, though)
UPDATE
We have a happy ending! :-) The OP has seen my comment and answered:
Thanks for your point, Fabio, I just edited the post so that the \ is only seen twice as intended.
So, as far as this specific problem is concerned, everything is solved now. And as a general rule for what must be done in these cases, I'd say the community is split between the "post it again" and "just let it go" positions (right now it's 4 vs 4). So I guess situations like this one have to be decided on a case-by-case basis.
UPDATE 2
I think I was too hasty to accept an answer. I have to say I didn't expect so much interest in this question. Instead, votes kept coming. Now things have stabilized (despite a new answer), and as noted by Nathan Tuggy, there is now a clear majority (23 vs 12) in favor of his answer.
We can draw this conclusion: in this specific case it was not completely clear what the OP meant, so judging whether my edit was OK is a tough call. Let's forget about it and let's focus on the general case: if a clearly good edit is rejected, most people think it's fine to resubmit it once. Not more than that, to avoid triggering edit wars, but it can be done.