124

I'm working on that last queue that we'll be adding to /review as part of the quality project, and it's arguably the most interesting piece of the puzzle.

It's a queue where folks that are interested in helping (mostly) new users can go to work on questions that the community has deemed likely to be valuable, but in need of some improvement before they can become lasting artifacts on the site. These are the questions that were sorted as 'should be improved' from the new triage queue.

The scope of what you can do in this new queue still hasn't settled, but editing is going to be a major part of it. One of the best ways you can help someone new to the site that asks what could be an interesting question is to edit it for them, and let them know why you changed what you did in the summary. This new queue will very strongly suggest substantive edits, since the questions that land in it have been marked by multiple users as needing some help.

Speaking to that, I'd like to get some feedback from anyone that has spent time editing. Once you're in the editor, what can cause you to abandon your edit? From experience, and the limited reasons I can infer, the following things can cause it:

  1. Turns out, you just don't have enough time.
  2. There's not enough information given - you can't really improve it without a missing piece, but you didn't realize it was missing when you started.
  3. You had a thought on how you were going to edit when you clicked the button, but it escaped you once the editor loaded. You just can't make sense of it after all.
  4. As you started cleaning things up, you realize it's a duplicate, and went to find the duplicate instead.
  5. You just lose enthusiasm somehow. Maybe it was more work than you thought it would be. Maybe it turned out to not be that great of a question after all; the cost-to-reward ratio just didn't pan out.

Editing can be funny that way, you often don't know what you've bitten off until you've chewed it for a bit.

Even if you closely identify with one of the reasons I've listed, I'd like to hear from you. Any narrative you care to share will help lend insight into (1) the selection process for what gets shown to you first when you enter the queue and (2) ways that the system can possibly alleviate some of the common pains that editors feel.

Your responses will help us put together an interface for the queue that gets out of your way as you help gems 'in the rough' take on a shine, while making sure the tools we provide you for doing that are extremely optimized for your time.

This post is part of the Stack Exchange quality project (More on MSO | More on MSE)

20
  • 94
    Or I spend a long time on an edit that makes a lot of changes, and then the OP edits the question substantially and I don't want to spend all that time making the changes again. Sort of a mix between 1 and 5 on your list.
    – TylerH
    Feb 1, 2015 at 16:46
  • 28
    I agree that the biggest problem is the concurrent edit. However, if a question has been through the triage queue and into a second review/editing queue, then the initial hubbub has long since died down. Of course, there'll be some contention in the new 'improve queue', especially to start with, and I think that you'll need to consider (carefully!) how to handle that. It would be even more frustrating to spend time improving an answer only to have the effort ignored. OTOH, you don't want someone to lock it indefinitely. You need some timely way of telling when they've abandoned an edit. Feb 1, 2015 at 16:51
  • 18
    100% concurent edits. Well, before I had character limit, it was sometimes also the fact that the edit turned out to be too minor. Feb 1, 2015 at 19:00
  • 1
    All of your suggestions, except 3. Quite often 5, unfortunately.
    – GolezTrol
    Feb 1, 2015 at 19:11
  • 3
    @JonathanLeffler, I’m not sure if any monitoring via JS would work OK for me. I use It’s All Text! Firefox addon to be able to edit using Vim. Cut & paste into one’s favorite editor is essentially equivalent. Don’t know how common such a behavior is, maybe I’ll have to cope with a little discomfort.
    – Palec
    Feb 1, 2015 at 21:13
  • 2
    @JonathanLeffler There will be some sort of mutual exclusion from within the queue itself - no two people would be shown the same question to work on. Feedback here also indicates that it's pretty important to block 'outside' noise as well, or folks happening upon posts in the queue opportunistically from outside of the queue. I don't think that will be common, but I am going to account for it, even if to say 'edits from within the improvement queue always win' if there's contention.
    – user50049
    Feb 2, 2015 at 0:47
  • 1
    Lock for the question I am editing? Finally! Feb 2, 2015 at 6:12
  • 5
    Sometimes I plan to edit the question, but after I've opened the editor, I realize that I can fix the question, but because of a complete lack of effort, I don't feel like he "deserves" to be helped. Feb 2, 2015 at 8:44
  • 5
    What I hate most: Community♦ reviewed this so_me date at ti:me: Reject
    – DroidDev
    Feb 2, 2015 at 10:47
  • 28
    My boss walking past...
    – Sobrique
    Feb 2, 2015 at 14:19
  • 4
    Usually because I almost finish the edit and then realise that I read the question wrong in the first place.
    – cmannett85
    Feb 2, 2015 at 14:31
  • 9
    6) I want to see what markup was used to achieve certain output. Never intended to make an edit, but had to open the editor to see
    – Izkata
    Feb 2, 2015 at 14:55
  • 1
    When I realize I have not had enough coffee yet.
    – Eric J.
    Feb 2, 2015 at 17:44
  • 10
    5. Sometimes I'm just too lazy to even fini
    – Compass
    Feb 2, 2015 at 18:39
  • 1
    I realize I'm just polishing a turd. Feb 2, 2015 at 21:08

34 Answers 34

1
2
1

For me it's usually a lack of confidence in my interpretation of the question (or answer).

I have no problem making spelling, grammar and formatting corrections and rarely abandon those, but when it comes to fixing a question that is so broken that I'm almost guessing what the OP wanted, I tend to drop it because I can't make enough sense of it to be confident that my cleaned up version is still asking the same question.

The trouble is that these questions will be deleted or closed without a serious edit, and it would not be surprising to me in the least if people rarely bothered editing such posts for the same reason. I usually spot them and say "what's that lassy? there's a poor quality question on SO that will be deleted without a serious overhaul!? sounds like a job for JAMMYPEACH!" but promptly lose enthusiasm when I realise that the reason it's in such poor shape is that nobody else could edit it either. And there are many better editors on SO.

I suppose this would come under #2.

0

Would start, then do a quick check with the existing answers to make sure it doesn't contradict any of them.

On seeing any user with higher rep, and noting if none of them edited the question at least for the glaring issues, why continue?

If they can't be bothered to fix up a question they're answering because they're spraying their answers everywhere as fast as they can, what's the use?

Downvote the question and move on.

0

Overall, I would say when I edit that I will abandon as a result of number 2 and sometimes, but rarely, number 4.

Quick edits (format, spelling, grammar)

The majority of edits I make are to fix formatting, spelling, and grammar. The errors are often small shortcomings which often do not immediately make a post low quality but where I feel I can improve the overall quality of the post with a quick edit. I will abandon these if someone else formats the entire thing first. In this case, there is a race condition present where an entire set of users are performing the same task (and I wish there was a way to prevent n-1 of the n users from working on it at that point; or if there were a way to merge all n edits together).

Edits which enhance meaning but include jargon

Following the quick edits as noted above, I will at times dive head first into fixing a post that I have interpreted as being a rational problem with a clear reproduction or identification of the issue. In these cases, I think I mostly get it right.

But speaking to when I abandon these edits, the primary reason which occurs is that part way through I realize I am potentially going to take the post out of context from the author. It isn't that I am changing it on purpose but it is because I am changing it from what they thought it was to more accurately describe what is happening from a technical point of view for future users.

At this point, often I worry that they did not want it to be that technical, will not understand why I changed it to be so technical, or that since they may not understand that it will just get rolled back. Sometimes I will even go so far as to raise the issue on meta or in chat to make sure that my edit is not going to change the intent of the question.

Edits which reveal multiple questions

Another situation I have found myself in is the realization that the question must be closed. I usually see these early, but every once in a while, I will edit a post into good form only to realize two questions were asked. One of them is horribly off topic, but the original question had a shot at being on topic. At this point, I am not sure what to do, usually stop editing, and will vote to close it based on its original state with regards to the off-topic portion.

0

My reasons are:

  1. The post has very poor writing that I don't want to fix
  2. Someone comments me while I try to edit
1
2

You must log in to answer this question.