I encountered a different sort of suggested edit and I'm curious about the community's opinions about this kind of thing.
On a succinct accepted answer to an old question, someone had suggested this edit adding a link to a different answer to the same question that offers a more in-depth explanation:
For an explanation of when and why this works, see
[the details below] (https://stackoverflow.com/a/link-to-other-answer).
with this edit summary:
Cross-reference this answer with the other answer that explains more deeply.
(Just to clarify, the edit was not suggested by the author of the linked answer.)
While I can see how the edit was intended to be helpful, my initial assessment was to reject it as "clearly conflicts with the author's intent", assuming that if the author had intended to add more in-depth explanation, they would have done so, and if readers weren't satisfied with the level of explanation in that answer, they would probably just scroll down and see what else was there anyway.
Am I correct in assuming that this type of edit intended to increase the visibility of another answer isn't really appropriate, or is this too strict an interpretation of "conflicts with author's intent"? Could it potentially be a valid/useful edit? Does this depend on the quality and accuracy of the two answers?
I don't see anything in the edit help page that specifically says not to do this, and I can see how it could be interpreted as a combination of a couple of the "common reasons to edit" listed there.
I haven't linked to the edit suggestion because I'd like to avoid getting bogged down in the details of a specific example and stay focused on the broader question. And I ended up skipping the review, for what it's worth (I skip a lot) but I'd like to see what y'all think about it.
This is "in-place" / "not in-place" solution, for the alternative see here[link].
This can help a visitor understand the nuance of an answer without having to trawl through dozens of solutions and possibly make mistakes.