When you encounter a minor edit in future, ask yourself the following questions:
Could the post have been improved further? If the editor left out other problems in the answer, reject it right away. All edits should improve the post substantially. If correcting a minor typo was the only thing that was done in the edit, then it's not much useful.
Does this minor edit improve the post greatly? In some cases, a minor typo could change the entire meaning of the post. If you think the edit does help, but there were still more to fix, just click on "Improve" and fix the rest of the problems yourself. Don't forget to tick the "This edit was helpful" checkbox when you submit the edit.
When you approve an edit that fixes a minor problem but fails to fix the other 10, that encourages the editor to continue making more edits like that. They get awarded +2 rep and will think it's fine to make such edits. Some might even go on a crusade looking for typos in posts and mass edit them all.
If the suggested edit fixed a typo in the question's title, then I'd say that's a good edit. Wouldn't it help other users who are searching for "framework" to find this question. Sure, it does. There isn't a strict rule to follow; each suggested edit should be approved/rejected based on its context.