I made an edit, which I would rather not directly reference at this time, where one of the changes I made, for clarity/correction, was modifying to the use of the word "implicitely" which is clearly not considered proper English by web sites such as Google:
"Did you mean: implicitly"
--or--
"Did you mean: define:implicitly"
Not only was this edit rejected by the same person who used the incorrect spelling, this part on its own is actually minor, and I would have left it there; however, the more major issue, for which I am posting is, this individual didn't even fix this (minor?) spelling issue themselves. Aren't some of these, rejecting an edit to one's own post, let alone not fixing the post, conflicts of interest in some way (a person blind to their own error in one case, can be blind to the same error in another/same case later)? This individual took the time reject my edit with the canned response:
"This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability."
and, yet, didn't have the decency to correct a very simple spelling error?
This is intended as an honest question and I do hope to receive an honest answer (or answers).