One of my edits was rejected: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/9389227. I changed the title from:
Dependant Template Compiles with Visual Studio, fails clang/gcc
To
Dependent Template Compiles with Visual Studio, but fails with clang/gcc
The main purpose of the edit was the change from "dependant" to "dependent", and I would never have made the edit to change "fails clang/gcc" to "but fails with clang/gcc" (as that doesn't make the question easier to find). But on that point, I made the edit because I believed it would make the question easier to find, and it was the reason it was rejected. I also felt I wasn't able to change anything else in the question to improve it as I found it well-written.
Dependant and dependent are two different words, although some sites make mention they do mean the same thing and that dependant is an alternate spelling for dependent. According to this answer on Grammar SE dependant isn't even used in American English, and means something entirely different in British English.
Regardless, looking up each on Stack Overflow gives two different results and dependant, if accepted, is considered the less common spelling.
So:
- Dependant is not considered a word in American English (which might explain why Chrome keeps putting a red squiggly line under it)
- If it is considered a word in American English, it's considered a more rare variation
- Dependant means something entirely different in British English
- Both give completely different search results on Stack Overflow
- The error mentioned in the question used "dependent"
By these merits: shouldn't changing dependant to dependent make the question easier to find, or am I being too pedantic?