I was going to edit my question on this Approved suggested edit from a known troll?, but I think it deserves its own question.
Where can I find the whole list of rules for reviews?
I was going to edit my question on this Approved suggested edit from a known troll?, but I think it deserves its own question.
Where can I find the whole list of rules for reviews?
Most of this is coming from the Edit Questions privilege, with a bit added on:
When should I edit posts?
Any time you feel you can make the post better, and are inclined to do so. Editing is encouraged!
Some common reasons to edit are:
- to fix grammatical or spelling mistakes
- to clarify the meaning of a post without changing it
- to correct minor mistakes or add addendums / updates as the post ages
- to add related resources or hyperlinks
Try to make the post substantively better when you edit, not just change a single character. Tiny, trivial edits are discouraged.
The big takeaways that I think are important here are teased out after doing so many of these edits, but this is what I've observed:
There are few posts out there that only have one thing wrong with them; find and fix as much as you can. When reviewing posts, cast a critical eye on the edit to see if there's anything else that should be fixed.
Clarifying the meaning of a post without changing it usually includes not touching someone else's code. For the question asker, it could be the difference between a breaking bug and something that's not reproducible (a-la Python); for an answer, it could change the context of the answer. By and large, I've noticed that these are discouraged.
If you're ever concerned about an edit or a review, then don't feel ashamed to ask about a specific instance.
I don't think it's fruitful to pursue a comprehensive list of "rules" that you can expect to be faithfully enforced. As a programmer, you have an intuition about what sorts of things make programming questions and their answers objectively clearer and more responsive. When an edit does that, you should accept it. When it doesn't, you should reject it. There's a considerable grey area in between where you should use your better judgment. Trying to reduce this intuition to a set of simple rules that a human would be capable of following is nigh impossible.
There are a handful of cases where your intuition leads you astray. "Recommendation questions" are universally banned because of their uncanny ability to solicit spam. (I'm not saying I agree that they all need to go away, but the line needs to be far closer to "ban them all" than you'd otherwise think. Spammers really, really want to spam SO, and they'll seize upon even the most tangential connection to their product.) You can often find useful guidance on these sorts of issues on Meta. (Along with lots and lots of noise and vitriol for some reason.)
In your particular case, I don't think you did anything wrong. It seems like a moderator was dealing with a bad actor, thought he could deal with some robo-reviewers at the same time, and accidentally scooped up a few legitimate edits and legitimate reviewers along the way. This will happen; moderators are human and humans make mistakes. (And I'm aware that this is not an emotionally satisfying answer!)