As I see it the purpose of the "grace period" (the period of time when you may edit your question/answer without said edit showing up in the reivision history) is to either:
- Reduce the clutter in the SO database so multiple minor edits don't show up as "expensive" versions.
- Give the OP an opportunity to fix their post so that their original error doesn't show up in the edit history.
I think reason 2) is ridiculous. If you screwed up, oh well, no big deal, but your mistake should show up in the edit history.
I think reason 1) is dubious. I'm sure there is a cost associated with a new version, but I doubt it is significant in the grand scheme of things. (the vast amount of other persistent edits that occur)
I think having a grace period is unhelpful and is often brazenly counter-productive for understanding what a conversation around a question is about. Consider this question:
Why isn't this static c# variable changing?
The first several comments are, "What static variables?", "No static variables are visible", and "The clue is in the name static. You have to declare your variable as static. You haven't." Coming two hours later, I see that the fields are in fact declared static. Moreover, there is nothing in the edit history to suggest that the OP ever asked the question otherwise. I can only assume that the reason for this disconnect is that the question was initially delivered with code that did not declare static
fields. However, presumably the grace period interfered and did not allow any evidence for this state to persist.
Do we really need a grace period? In my experience over the years, the existence of a grace period has always been harmful. If SO can bear the expense, I feel the "feature" should be discarded.