Yes, there is a "secret link". Or not that secret - all the revision links are the same but have the post ID in them:
https://stackoverflow.com/posts/45250111/revisions
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^
parent site post ID
What I find is the easiest way to find the post ID "by hand" is
- for questions - it's in the URL already
- for answers (and questions) - [share] under the post and copy the second to last ID (from the post in the question):
https://stackoverflow.com/a/45250111/3689450
^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^
post ID your user ID
There are of course programmatic ways to get the ID of a post by examining the HTML. You can still use share
button, for example:
const link = document.querySelector(".js-share-link").href;
const postId = link
.split("/") //divide by sections separated by `/`
.slice(-2, -1) //extract second to last
[0]; //extract from array
or various other ways, as well - this is an illustration of a programmatic way to do the same as the "manual" process.
With all that said, you can see the edit history by going to the post and clicking the timestamp of the last edit. But if there was no edit, then you wouldn't have any direct link. This is exactly what happened:
- Suggested edit was made at
2020-03-06 02:51:58Z
.
- You posted this question at
2020-03-06 08:33:40Z
.
- The edit was approved at
2020-03-06 08:37:48Z
- 4 minutes after the question was posted.
This was the first and (currently) only edit made to that post, so you wouldn't have had any history to see.
Still, if you put in the "magic" URL for a post with no edits made, you would see the history but that history would be very boring showing a single entry - the original one.