Simple math:
4 + 1 = 5, not 21.
I believe there was a recent change counting all posts one can review (except Close queue of course) instead of only suggested edits, but still... there shouldn't be such a big difference.
Simple math:
4 + 1 = 5, not 21.
I believe there was a recent change counting all posts one can review (except Close queue of course) instead of only suggested edits, but still... there shouldn't be such a big difference.
As of yesterday (April 6, 2017) we no longer show a count for this at all; instead, we highlight the indicator if...
This isn't ideal, but it's a step up from what we had... And more importantly, it's reasonably fast - which can't be said for previously-attempted perfectly-accurate counters. Since it has to run on every page load (and occasionally update while the page is visible), being fast is really critical; easy to make the site completely unusable if we fail to achieve that.
There's also a snazzy drop-down listing the queues, so you can check on what's new without having to leave the page you're on:
Kudos to Oded for whipping this up!
See Adam Lear's response to the original feature request:
It is also cached, so may or may not be very accurate depending on the amount of ongoing activity in /review at any given time.
and in the comments below it is the remark that:
It's the total [number of review items]. It doesn't take individual user actions into account at all at the moment.
So the number is off because it is cached and not your personal count.
Providing a personalised count would ask too much of the Stack Exchange servers; the count would have to be recalculated on every page request, and depends on the review actions of everyone else. So, as Shog9 puts it:
Super-expensive to personalize this - so the alternative is simply not having an indicator. Think of it as... A reminder to encourage your peers to review.
Either we have an indicator that's somewhat incorrect, or no indicator at all. On an insanely active site like Stack Overflow that means it is incorrect all the time, unfortunately.