This has probably been asked before, but
What's wrong with minor edits?
Jeff Atwood had something against them and as a result we have stupid limits on having to add 6 characters to an edit before it will be accepted (which as often led me to add ...... on the edit of a question I have edited for formatting by adding paragraphs and white space which improves readability greatly).
Surely the nice big Stack Overflow servers aren't in danger of filling up with too many edits!
Writing this question in Meta was prompted by this review
https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/4662625
Now sure the question isn't great, and yes there could have been a little more done in the edit, but its not a BAD edit. It improves the question and it improves Stack Overflow. It might just be enough to make the question readable enough for someone to look at it.
I was going to approve this edit and it was rejected by 3 others as 'Too Minor'!!! I could understand if one of those users then went and changed it but of course they didn't. The other side effect of this is that the user who made a valid suggested edit to make a question more readable is now wondering why he should bother making suggested edits in the future if they are going to be rejected.
I make many, many edits all the time that would probably be considered too minor if I had to suffer the indignity of someone else approving them
https://stackoverflow.com/posts/961193/revisions
Now I understand we don't want people going in adding a '.' and expecting to get a couple of rep points, but surely we can try to draw the distinction between an edit that is too minor and brings no benefit to the question and a minor edit which greatly improves the question (generally through clearer formatting).
Can we change the guidelines for rejecting edits to reject minor edits that do not improve the question or answer and edits that are minor but are still useful?