macros tag has problems. New users continually keep using it for MS Office Macros. Tag description clearly states it is not to be used for that.
This has been a topic of many Wiki discussions (general discussion; downvoted idea to deal with it; accepted wiki answer telling people to retag [macros]). The conclusion of these discussions is that there is nothing really to do about them besides occasionally cleaning up the tag.
That is what I did from time to time, I went and removed macros tags from questions about MS Office VBA. In the past, this was OK, but yesterday I got an editing ban for this.
Some of the questions already had an accepted and upvoted answer, some questions were upvoted themselves. There was nothing else to edit, I just removed macros tag, sometimes added vba or excel-vba. And these were rejected.
So, what now?
- If reviewers were right, then this is it for the macros tag? Nothing to be done about it?
- If I was right, can someone lift my editing ban and warn the reviewers who clearly had no idea what they were rejecting?
This is getting really frustrating.
(Also, can I call the attention of the specific reviewers who denied my edits to this wiki discussion? With @ maybe?)
Ok, I understand it better now. My edits were rejected because there would have been other things to edit about those questions.
An interesting point is that there is no such reject tag ("more could have been done" or "doesn't solve all the issues"), and the one usually applied is not actually true to my edits:
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.
So the question now really is: should an edit be rejected just because more could have been done? Aren't small steps taking us closer to the desired outcome: a good, well-structured, well-tagged question?
Also, something needs to be done about this wretched macros tag (Good description - not enough; protection idea - downvoted; cleanup - banned. Argh.). I'll keep thinking...
One last idea:
First "offenders" should be warned first. 7 days editing ban is way too harsh for edits that are deemed not bad, not destructive in any way, but merely "not enough".
This is actually ridiculous, frustrating, and teaches me and others affected to just stop trying to improve the content on Stack Overflow. :(
Macros
tag, and leaving the rest of the editing to other enthusiastic reviewers. :) Is this not allowed (supported, encouraged, whatever) then?