Folks sometimes approach me when they see my Stack Overflow T shirt, and talk about their experience on the site. There are 10+ SO users in my building alone.
Chief complaints:
- I got down voted
- I didn't get an answer, nobody viewed my question
The most common causes of not getting attention on your question initially is a bad non-descriptive title, and the omission of a very important tag. Folks will post questions about an API, but neglect to say they're doing stuff in Python. It's important.
If an edit makes a question stand a better chance of getting an answer than it would otherwise, or the user having a good experience, then it should probably be accepted. Adding a period or wrapping random things in inline code
isn't going to help a question get an answer or folks have a better experience. Leaving a lot of stuff that should have been edited is also not going to be much help.
So, don't ask yourself "Should (criteria) be accepted?" Just think "Will this edit result in (1) higher quality, (2) the user getting a good answer or (3) the user having a better experience than they would have otherwise?"
If you make it any more complicated, then you run into this awkward decision paralysis and that tends to make reviewing not be so much fun.