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I recently gained the 'edit' privilege on Stack Overflow. Often, when editing others' questions or answers, I'm sure of what I'm doing and thus it's nice that my changes are now applied immediately.

Sometimes, however, I'd still like to simply suggest an edit and would like it to be peer reviewed before it is applied. In some of these cases, leaving a comment for the original author instead of doing the editing myself is an option, but in some cases, showing the changes I'd want to suggest themselves (and explaining only their reason in the edit comment) would be much more efficient than explaining what changes I suggest.

Having the 'edit' privilege, can I opt an edit I make to go to the edit suggestions queue instead of being applied immediately? If not, would an option like this be beneficial or put undue load on the suggested edits queue?

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    Just submit the edit, if the OP disagrees with the edit they can roll it back.
    – user4639281
    Oct 10, 2015 at 19:35
  • at main site (not on meta), you can simply open post in logged out (aka "private", "incognito") mode, click "improve this question/answer" link and submit edit suggestion as anonymous user
    – gnat
    Oct 10, 2015 at 20:19
  • In addition to @TinyGiant suggestion - consider to add comment like "I've edited your post to xxxxxx, please rollback if it does not match your intention/consider clarifying YYYY if rolled back". Such comment (assuming OP is actually active on site) likely eliminates chance of "$#$#$ you've touched my post" comments and generally make more positive impression. (Makes sure also to read second answer in duplicate - it is unlikely to get type of review you are looking for) Oct 11, 2015 at 5:54
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    @AlexeiLevenkov good idea about the comment. That matches well with what the workflow on stackoverflow.com/review/helper encourages editors to do. And yes, I've already read (and upvoted) answer meta.stackoverflow.com/a/293631/477420 when agreeing to close my question as duplicate. Made me change my point of view.
    – das-g
    Oct 11, 2015 at 8:37

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