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Yesterday, I suggested an edit to a question. While I fixed up some grammar, the majority of the edit was pasting in the code that the asker had decided to put in an answer instead of editing it into his question. This edit was rejected because:

This edit deviates from the original intent of the post. Even edits that must make drastic changes should strive to preserve the goals of the post's owner.

Should I refrain from adding the code when it's given in the future? My edit summary wasn't quite that clear. Rather than

Fixed the English and added the code from his 'answer'

I could have written something like

Fixed English; author added their code later as an answer so I'm putting that in the question instead

but at the time, the former seemed to be enough.

Was I right to edit the question?

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  • I have no bloody idea what to tag this, so if anyone could let me know, I'd be grateful.
    – Nic
    Apr 26, 2015 at 16:45
  • Your second version of that would have had a better chance at surviving I think. No guarantees though.
    – Mat
    Apr 26, 2015 at 16:58

1 Answer 1

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Was I right to edit the question?

Yes. Your suggested edit was fine:

  • it didn't change the original intent of the question
  • it improved the content of the question
  • it added additional information that the author has posted outside the question.

However, your edit summary suggested that you actually added an answer into the question. Also, even though "how can i add "\n\t" between elements" and "How can I insert a tag on a new line with proper indentation?" are semantically the same, the latter focuses on the insertion of the tag, whereas the first focuses on "\n\t".

This probably lead to the rejection: a bunch of code of unknown origin (reviewers can't see the answer), and a changed question sentence. As Mat noted, a longer edit summary would have helped.

For the next time:

  • make sure that your edit summary contains all information a possible reviewer needs,
  • make sure that the original intend stays the same for a reviewer.

See also

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  • 2
    Of course it's quite possible the reviewer didn't even read the edit summary...
    – Benjol
    Apr 27, 2015 at 5:32

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