This post is a bit old now, but let me register a minor dissent. The edit contained a mixture of several good, neutral, and bad changes. Given that, I'd argue that rejecting it was defensible (even if, on balance, I think it should've been approved), and that the reviewer who rejected the edit with the "superfluous or actively harm readability" reason didn't deserve to be review-banned.
Good changes:
- Capitalising the two uncapitalised sentences
- Converting constructs specific to Indian English (specifically the use of "code"/"codes" as a countable noun rather than a mass noun) to the form that is correct in British/American English, which is more widely recognised
- Converting some full stops at the end of paragraphs before code blocks to colons to make the connection clearer
- Fixing the grammar in the first sentence of the final paragraph
- Fleshing out the instruction in the final sentence
- Pluralising "prefix" to "prefixes" in a context where two prefixes are being talked about
Neutral changes that do neither harm nor good:
- Converting "Note" to "Notice"
- Rearranging word order in the first sentence
- Changing "I noted that" to "However"
Bad changes:
- Changing "you ll get the same JShint error" to "it will throw the same JShint error" (since the code itself doesn't throw the error)
- Changing "two" to "2". (Most English style guides recommend writing the numbers 0-9 as words in English prose, and only using numerals for negative or multi-digit numbers.)
- Turning the entire final paragraph into a grammatically incorrect run-on sentence.
I'd personally say that the good solidly outweighs the bad and would choose to "Improve Edit" if I saw this in review, but I think a reasonable, conscientious reviewer who had carefully read the edit could disagree and take the view that none of the good changes improve the post sufficiently to justify approving an edit that introduces new errors into the answerer's writing. Rounding that perspective off to "Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability." seems reasonable to me.
The reviewer who chose "This edit defaces the post in order to promote a product or service, or is deliberately destructive." as their rejection reason, on the other hand, doesn't have a leg to stand on and deserves their review ban.
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method that wasn't in the post. Reviewers might go huh? on that if it appears out of nowhere.set
method text I added, it was to further help future readers in understanding how to fix the issue, which is the main goal of an answer.