The reviewer who rejected your edit was wrong and Andrew's point about the reviewer not paying attention to the Markdown version of the edit is spot on.
But you could have done a lot more to help the reviewers. Your edit description was precisely "fixed formatting". With such a poor comment, you are lucky your edit wasn't rejected completely. That comment is extremely common and one of the absolute worst comments you can make because it tells the reviewer absolutely nothing.

I've spoken about this issue before as has Shog9. Edit comments aren't just there for the sake of being there. They provide a valuable service to the reviewers and providing a good one help you help them understand the context of the edit. The edit comment is extremely important for reviewers to help explain what you are doing and why.
Yes, there are plenty of cases where it may be blindingly obvious what you did (as is the case here only when looking at the markdown version of the edit), but there are far more cases where it is less obvious what you are doing and why (as is the case here only when looking at the rendered output version of the edit).
When text appears out of nowhere, the reviewer may be quick to press the reject button, but a good editor will check the comment to see if there was a reason.
Had you provided a more descriptive comment such as:
Added code ticks to HTML tags so they appear in the rendered version of the question.
Someone probably would have been much less quick to hit the reject button.
gcse
stuff was coming from. When you look at the rendered output, it looks like thegcse
tags are being added in from where nothing existed before, and your edit for "fixing formatting" to me, didn't actually appear like format fixes, but addition of content.