I think that the answer is very clear, if you want to follow what's intended by this change.
If the edit improves the post, approve it. Yes, that means if they add (useful) code formatting you should approve it. Yes, that means if they add a truly useful tag approve it. (I still reject a lot of tag-edits because they add a stupid tag that doesn't belong there.)
If the edit is invalid/vandalism/etc., reject it for that reason.
If the edit is incredibly minor and doesn't fix a lot of other problems, such that you don't feel comfortable approving it, you have three choices:
- Fix it up yourself
- Approve it, if it still provides some benefit
- Skip it and let someone else fix it up
Skip is a perfectly valid choice here. If you're skipping most of your edit reviews for this reason, either you got a weird batch of reviews or you're not really thinking this sufficiently through; even when Too Minor was a reason, and I was probably in the 75th percentile or so of minor-rejecters, I didn't have Too Minor more than 20-30% of my reviews, and now that i'm accepting a decent number of things I didn't accept before, I wouldn't use this more than a few times (caveat: I haven't reviewed a lot lately either).
I just did ten or so, and found 2 that I probably wouldn't have approved before due to 'too minor', but both were acceptable now I felt; in particular, this edit which removes a quotation mark from the title. I think you could justify reject/editing that, but I felt that it honestly was a useful edit (stray apostrophes are annoying!) and there wasn't a whole lot truly wrong with the question (you probably should do something with the rendered output section, but I couldn't decide what was best, and it looks okay as it is).
This is exactly what this was for: approve these edits, even though they're minor, because they do accomplish something. I didn't see anything that I had to skip or had to revise, and like I said, I used to be a pretty heavy Too Minor user compared to (even the educated meta user) norm.
I think the big problem with this change (not that the change is bad, but why people have a problem with it) comes from two places:
- Change is bad
- Offended sense of justice
The former is just life, but the latter can be addressed - by ourselves. You shouldn't have an offended sense of justice over the fact that people now get 2 rep for little edits. First off, it's just imaginary points, so who cares. Second, it gets them to a whopping 2k reputation. Third, you know why they're getting rep? It trains them to think about editing. Even if they do stupid little stuff like removing apostrophes, maybe then later they will do more. And sure, maybe we should figure out a better way to reward edits - reward only edits over 15 characters, reward only edits made on Wednesdays, whatever - but whatever system you built will be gamified, and honestly it doesn't matter that much. People gamifying this system is good because it means they are editing. As long as the edits are helpful edits, they're getting the right kind of feedback; and if they really are doing a lot of little crap they'll get enough reject->edited that they will at least vaguely understand there is something more to be done. As long as they're not actively hurting things, it's not something we need to stop.