A habit I've developed over years of editing fora and articles online is, having made a post or created a document, I'll review it and immediately notice at least two or three minor corrections I could make. My usual response has simply been to make the corrections since altering your own posts is not generally subject to review. In this way, some of my posts, both on Stack Exchange and elsewhere, may receive ten or twelve edits, by me, in their first day, depending on how nit-picky I'm feeling or how terrible a job I've done to begin with.
Most of the edits create some improvement in the readability or clarity of the post, without changing the core point or revising it in a way that meaningfully alters its purpose; sometimes I might think of a better word, or correct some piece of punctuation, or realize that my little jokes aren't funny and ought better to cut them out. The edits are seldom profound, though they do improve the quality of the piece at least somewhat-- sometimes significantly when taken together.
So my question is this: Should I bother, and does it create problems? I know that other people may end up losing their edits-in-progress if some minor edit I make jumps past them while they're working, but I also realize the likelihood of this is rather remote. On the one hand, our posts are our own to curate and maintain, and it's not as if these edits create some mountain of unseen spam notifications for someone somewhere[, right??]. But there are also guidelines for making edits to other peoples' posts, and there is probably an argument to be made for observing those guidelines on our own.
I usually do my best to roll as many edits into a single update as I can, but that doesn't mean I succeed. Because there is no mechanism limiting it (currently), I imagine that it's not really a problem and that individual users' discretion is usually good enough, but it couldn't hurt to hear more about it.
Is there some protocol regarding the frequency of revising our own posts?