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I just came againt this question

My first idea while answering is that there's an attribute missing to the first resource, wrote my answer in this way (plus other side effects).

I don't really know why but I feel it could be interesting to see the edits made to the question after and I found this one

The idea from the first editor is great, indenting the code block for readability, but he probably think the code inside was a try to format and removed it.

This is conflicting with author intent (and this is changing the code in an error) but it has been accepted.

I re-edited to add the missing attribute and edited my answer.

My question is could we/should we warn the editor and the reviewers they made a mistake ?

To be more precise: is a feature like git blame something that have been already discussed ?

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  • 1
    See this question about notifications.
    – Joe
    Apr 20, 2015 at 14:58
  • Thank @Joe didn't think searching about notification, searched about edit/review.
    – Tensibai
    Apr 20, 2015 at 15:02

1 Answer 1

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You cannot 'notify' a reviewer, though you can do so to an editor.

This happens from time to time in the tag which I frequent; people close or edit questions harmfully because they don't know SAS. When that happens, I:

  • Rollback the edit or vote to re-open
  • Leave a (general) comment letting people know why the edit/close is incorrect

That's about all you can do. Under a very few circumstances you could flag for a moderator, but it wouldn't be for one edit: only for a particular person who frequently made bad edits or bad reviews that you notice a substantial pattern.

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  • Ok, I had an idea about a git blame thing, but indeed a comment would be enough to let the editor know he's mistake there.
    – Tensibai
    Apr 20, 2015 at 15:04

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