As a moderator, I sometimes have to delete bad answers. Sometimes, those answers are edited after I've deleted them, and it turns into an episode of "The Big Bad Moderator".
This doesn't just happen with answers, and it doesn't just happen to moderators.
Anytime the final closure or deletion vote is cast (for moderators, this would be their binding vote), a revision of the post should be generated so that the community knows why the post was closed or deleted. This should happen even if the post is within its initial five-minute grace period for editing.
Alternatively (accomplishes the same goal), DeDuplicator's suggestion that once the final (binding) vote is cast for closure or deletion, any new revisions made to the post will trigger a revision change.
This would serve two three purposes:
- It would keep the aforementioned incidents from happening; as anyone could clearly see the state of the post when it was closed/deleted
- It allows close voters and deletion voters to link to a specific revision they had issues with; so that others could see if those issues were rectified.
- As Shog9 points out: "edits made after closure trigger reopen review. But if there's no edit logged (because the edit was rolled into the original revision) then that doesn't happen"
This probably doesn't happen on other sites as often, but on Stack Overflow I often come across questions or answers that were just flagged and take care of the post, and this is sometimes within seconds of the question being posted. It's actually a little surprising this issue doesn't come up on meta more often.
ASFDASDF
as answer, after I flagged it, s\he edited to normal. I am feeling really guilty about that.