Back before the great change of edit reasons, from time to time I would come across a suggested edit to some utterly worthless post that was, I guess, an improvement, but not enough of one for the resulting post to have any value.
We're talking about things like:
- Beautifully fixing broken code formatting on an answer that is totally wrong and confusing, and remains so after the edit
- Beautifully fixing the grammar and writing style of a totally wrong answer
- Fixing code errors in somebody's ugly code-only answer to a question that already has a much superior answer
Essentially, cases where the post is unsalvagable, clearly deserved a downvote before, and still does after - but the edit undeniably makes it a little less crap. I don't want to approve these edits because the editor is wasting their time putting effort into something that won't actually help anybody, and I don't feel good about incentivising people to waste time and energy.
Before the edit reasons were changed, I used to reject these with custom reasons along the lines of
This answer was bad before your edit because [reason], and it's still bad now for the same reason. It will never help anyone. Don't waste your own time editing crap like this - go outside instead.
But when I go to do this, the custom rejection reason box is labelled causes harm and the placeholder text tells me
Describe how this edit would make the post worse.
Well, it wouldn't, and that's not why I want to reject it. Am I supposed to wave these edits through, now?