I think if your goal is to help examples like the ones in the question actually have a higher chance of getting good answers, then beyond it just being reasonable to copy edit examples like those, you should edit those kinds of examples if you can afford the time.
The reason is that I think that for better or worse there are probably a significant number of SO users who when they see things like i instead of I or kno instead of know are just going to stop right there and not bother to read any further.
I guess it could be argued that we should all try to look past minor capitalization and punctuation errors and whatnot but the reality is that of course we all have a very limited amount of time to spend helping each other here, and when people asking questions have not themselves taken time to do simple things like capitalizing where they should, it kind of gives the impression that maybe they don’t value the time of others here enough to put effort into making their questions more readable, and reduces our motivation for spending any part of own time budget trying to help them.
But in those cases, if the content of the question is otherwise good, I think it’s a socially positive thing for those users and for the community to make it into a learning lesson for them by doing the edits they should have made themselves but—very importantly—also including in the edit summary a good description of why you took time to make the edits; for example:
Tweaks to ensure others take time to read, and to improve chances of getting a good answer
I think it can also be helpful for those users if you add a separate comment saying the same thing but expanding on it a bit. But minimally the edit summary should at least try to make it clear.