Spending some quality time in the Suggested Edits review queue, I am noticing more and more that there are lots of generally well-meaning editors out there who are not removing noise like "Thanks", actual name signatures, "Please help me I can't figure it out!", etc.
I'm not referring to folks who just add a few backticks and leave a ton of other problems. I'm referring to edits that actually fix pretty much everything else in the post, except the noise. Clearly the editor is doing the best he/she can, but where is the guidance that indicates greetings are noise?
If one peruses Meta at all, it becomes clear a) what constitutes noise, and b) that the noise should be removed (along with everything else wrong, of course). However, if one doesn't look at Meta at all, it must be much less obvious. Right now, as I understand it, the best way to communicate this directly is to accept the edit, remove the noise yourself, then tell the editor in the comments on the post that they should remove noise.
I don't particularly like this option, because it adds noise in the comments on the post itself. It's also going to get quite annoying, as it would have to be done very frequently. (The number of edits I see like this is growing)
My question - how can we give more specific editing guidance? In particular, the following is what is in the tips in the "Help and Improvement" queue:
Editing The Body
Read and understand the question! If you don't know what it's asking, skip.
- Ensure the question begins with a problem statement!
- Fix all spelling, capitalization and grammatical mistakes
- Ensure all code is formatted and readable
- Remove unnecessary introductions and closings
- Rewrite demands and appeals to emotion
- Add additional details left in the comments (shown below)
Is this (or something like it) shown to all editors? Excepting, of course, the review-queue specifics.
Note, that for some reason I cannot make any "How To Edit" box show up outside of review, even though I could swear I've seen it, so if there is one I can't verify what it currently says.
Some related meta posts, since folks on meta like research. The third one refers to editing answers, but my issue is most applicable to questions.