Check the precise timestamps.
Your review:
OP's review
You clicked "Edit" 3 seconds before the OP clicked "Reject and Edit". The moment you clicked "Edit", the edit was approved, so anything that happened after that was irrelevant. The reason the OP's reject and edit was listed is likely because the OP was viewing the suggested edit the same time you did so the action was recorded, just didn't count for approval/rejection since you were faster.
It's a race condition. You were both performing the same action as the same time (reviewing the suggested edit) and you just happened to be a little faster.
The timeline is roughly
- You opened the suggested edit page and started reviewing
- The OP saw the red notification and opened the suggested edit page and started reviewing
- You completed your review and decided to click "Edit". The moment you did that, the edit was approved, the editor received his +2 bonus.
- The OP completed his/her review and decided to click "Reject and Edit". Since you already approved the edit, the reject part of tjhe OP's review didn't count.
Where this really get confusing is after step 4. The final revision theoretically should be depend greatly on how fast both you and the OP edited the post. But looking at the revision history, it is unclear however if this is what happened.
Your improved edit was committed first, the OP then has an empty edit following yours. It is possible that the OP made the same exact edit as yours so there were no changes, but in theory, if the OP made significant changes, their edit would have effectively rolled back the suggested edit and your edit, but it is not clear if this actually occured.
As for why this occurred, typically, once someone is actively reviewing the post (this goes for any review queue), the system does not prevent them from completing the review. The system only prevents a user from entering the review after the review was already completed. In my example timeline above, if Step 3 happened before Step 2, then the OP would not have been permitted to review the post because the review was completed. That is why the order of the events is very important.
Reject and Edit
? I often see those red boxes where it says that I can't review it anymore for ... reasons