It was a good edit. So good, in fact, that it has now been approved.
(Well, one thing was not-so-good about it: the edit summary. This is often overlooked, but it's actually a pretty important component of a good edit, especially one that you seek to have approved by others. It's just like an entry in your source control system. If you're going to change other people's work, you need to have a good reason, but you also need to document what that reason is. In this case, "improved answer" was not really sufficient. I see poor quality edit comments quite often. They are usually not enough to reject an edit, unless they are just a complete lie, but we can all do better.)
The reviewers who rejected it acted in error. I'm not sure what they were thinking, but I can guess.
A leading theory is that at least one of them doesn't know the Java language and therefore couldn't tell whether the change introduced by the edit was correct. Instead of skipping or doing a little research, they chose to err on the side of rejection. While defensible in general, skipping would have been a better course of action. When in doubt, skip!
Another leading theory is that reviewers simply don't know what to look for or how to judge quality edits. This is kind of a systemic problem, and one that is extremely difficult to correct.
Maybe they thought it was too minor of an edit? That isn't really defensible here, though, since (A) fixing a potentially-confusing misuse of terminology is not minor, and (B) there was nothing else obviously wrong that was left unfixed.
In general, you should be approving edits that make the post easier to read, more accurate, and/or easier to find. That means you should be approving edits that fix formatting, improve clarity (e.g., with spelling/grammar fixes, and/or with improvements to the title), add relevant tags, remove irrelevant tags, and fix minor semantic mistakes (such as this, or typos in code). Pretty obvious stuff, I think.
See: Privileges: Edit Questions and Answers
Given the realities of suggested edits and the nature of community review, it's probably best to leave major surgery to users with full edit privileges. It's just too hard to get anything that makes major changes approved via the suggested edit review queue, even when it does respect the author's intent.
equals
is not a method in all languages. People without experience in those language may think that the original post meant equals operator. so they rejected the edit